Election Night 2012- Coverage, Discussions and Predictions

Who Will Win The Presidency ?

  • Obama In A Landslide

    Votes: 110 42.5%
  • Obama In A NailBiter

    Votes: 131 50.6%
  • Romney In A LandSlide

    Votes: 2 0.8%
  • Romney In A Nailbiter

    Votes: 6 2.3%
  • GOP Steals Another

    Votes: 10 3.9%
  • The People Would Not Be Disenfranchised

    Votes: 11 4.2%

  • Total voters
    259

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Election results 2012: Hour by hour: What to watch on Election Night
Read more: http://www.politico.com/news/stories/1112/83266.html#ixzz2BCsnNcIE


WASHINGTON — Stock up on munchies and make sure the batteries in your TV remote are fresh. With this year's presidential election razor-close to the finish, Tuesday could be a long night.

Even if the presidency isn't decided until after midnight EST, there will be plenty of clues early in the evening on how things are going for President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt Romney. Obama has more options for piecing together the 270 electoral votes needed for victory, so any early setbacks for Romney could be important portents of how the night will end.

Here's a timetable for armchair election watchers on how the night will unfold, based on what time the last polls close in each state. All times are EST.

—7 p.m.: Polls close in six states but all eyes will be on Virginia, the first of the battleground states to begin reporting results. If either candidate is comfortably ahead in Virginia, with 13 electoral votes, that could be a leading indicator of which way the night is going.

Virginia typically has been fairly fast at counting ballots. But there's a new voter ID law in the state that could complicate things this year. Voters who don't bring identification to the polls still can have their ballots counted if they produce ID by Friday. If the race in Virginia is super tight, it could come down to those provisional ballots. On Election Night, no one will even know how many of them are out there.

Virginia is especially important for Romney. In 2008, Obama became the first Democratic presidential candidate to carry Virginia since 1964. Keep an eye on turnout in northern Virginia's Democratic strongholds for an early idea of which way the state will go.

—7:30 p.m.: Polls close in three states, including all-important Ohio (18 electoral votes) and competitive North Carolina (15).

If Ohio is particularly close, and polls suggest it might be, there's a chance the outcome there won't be known until after Election Day, and the presidency could hinge on it. In the last several elections, between 2 percent and 3 percent of the state's votes came from provisional ballots, which aren't counted until later. In 2004, after a long, tense night counting votes, the presidential race wasn't decided until 11 a.m. the next day, when Democrat John Kerry called President George Bush to concede Ohio and the presidency.

Romney desperately needs Ohio; no Republican has won the presidency without it. Without Ohio, Romney would need victories in nearly all the remaining up-for-grabs states and he'd have to pick off key states now leaning Obama's way, such as Wisconsin and Iowa. Obama has more work-arounds than Romney if he can't claim Ohio.

In North Carolina, the most conservative of the hotly contested states, Romney appeared to have the late edge in polling. Obama, who narrowly won the state in 2008, has paid less attention to it recently. An Obama victory there could point to broader troubles for Romney.

—8 p.m.: More pieces of the puzzle will start falling into place as polls close in the District of Columbia and 16 states, including battlegrounds Florida (29) and New Hampshire (four).


Democratic-leaning parts of Florida tend to be the last places to report, so be careful about jumping to a conclusion if Romney looks strong early on. Most of the polls in Florida close at 7 p.m. Eastern, so by 8 p.m. Eastern, when the last polls close, results will start to roll out quickly. But fully 4.5 percent of votes in Florida weren't counted on election night in 2008, so if things are tight, no one's going to be hasty about declaring a victor in the state. Especially after the 2000 fiasco in which the winner in Florida, and thus the presidency, wasn't determined for more than a month. If you want to get really granular, Hillsborough County, home to Tampa-St. Petersburg-Clearwater, is widely considered a bellwether for the state.

Tiny New Hampshire is another competitive state to watch closely.
Also keep watch on Pennsylvania for any signs of a Romney surprise. The state has long been considered safe for Obama, but Republicans started running ads there in the final week of the campaign and the GOP ticket was campaigning there Sunday. No Republican presidential candidate has carried the state in nearly a quarter century.

—8:30 p.m.: Polls close in Arkansas (six), where Romney is comfortably ahead in surveys.

—9 p.m.: Polls close in 14 states, including battlegrounds Colorado (nine) and Wisconsin (10). Democrats have carried Wisconsin for six straight presidential elections and Obama had the edge in polling going in, so a flip here would be especially noteworthy.

Colorado, where almost 80 percent of voters cast early ballots, could be a straggler because it's so close. Historically, as much as 10 percent of the state's vote doesn't get counted on election night, and those ballots could be decisive in a close race.

Information from exit polls could help flesh out the Colorado picture: Young professionals and Hispanic voters were central to Obama's victory there in 2008, but the sluggish economy has hurt his standing.

Two more to watch: Minnesota and Michigan. The states long have been considered safe for Obama, but the Republicans made late moves there.

— 10 p.m.: Polls close in four states, including the last of the battlegrounds, Iowa (six) and Nevada (six).

Iowa's been leaning toward Obama, but watch how the vote breaks down geographically. Can Romney's advantage in GOP-heavy western Iowa overcome Obama's edge in eastern swing territory?

If Obama wins Ohio and Wisconsin, Romney would have to have help from the West, in places like Nevada and Colorado. Nevada, where two-thirds of the electorate votes early, has been moving Obama's direction in recent weeks, powered by strength in huge labor and Hispanic voting blocs. A Romney incursion there would really mean something

—11 p.m.: Polls close in five western states, but most are foregone conclusions for Obama. He gets 78 electoral votes from California, Hawaii, Oregon and Washington; Romney gets four from Idaho.

— 1 a.m. Wednesday: The last of the polls close, in Alaska. Romney gets three electoral votes. Will many people still be up?

Political junkies could well be waiting to see how things play out in one or more battleground states.


IF YOU HAVEN"T VOTED GET OUT ON TUESDAY AND EXERCISE YOUR RIGHT AND YOUR DUTY
 
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TX,FL,and maybe VA.I think mitt have them states on lock.NY,CA,and NOW NJ. O got that them states on lock.Every other state is a tuff one to call!





 
Obama will be declared the winner before polls close out West.
 


TX,FL,and maybe VA.I think mitt have them states on lock.NY,CA,and NOW NJ. O got that them states on lock.Every other state is a tuff one to call!






obama had those states on lock Jan 1 2012... jersey has gone democratic the last 6 presidential elections i believe.


my prediction is we may not know who won until tuesday the 12th...
 
obama had those states on lock Jan 1 2012... jersey has gone democratic the last 6 presidential elections i believe.


my prediction is we may not know who won until tuesday the 12th...



:yes::yes::yes:

FL is a wild one to call.

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, Florida had a population of 18,801,310. In terms of race and ethnicity, the state was:

75.0% White (57.9% Non-Hispanic White alone)
16.0% Black or African American
0.4% American Indian and Alaska Native
2.4% Asian
0.1% Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
3.6% from Some Other Race
2.5% from Two or More Races
Hispanics and Latinos of any race made up 22.5% of the population




 


:yes::yes::yes:

FL is a wild one to call.

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, Florida had a population of 18,801,310. In terms of race and ethnicity, the state was:

75.0% White (57.9% Non-Hispanic White alone)
16.0% Black or African American
0.4% American Indian and Alaska Native
2.4% Asian
0.1% Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
3.6% from Some Other Race
2.5% from Two or More Races
Hispanics and Latinos of any race made up 22.5% of the population





Obama got Florida.

Hillsborough County (Tampa) has reported record Democratic turnout with early voting. Dems so far are leading repubs by 27,000 more votes. Orange County (Orlando) is going to lean Democrat. South Florida will also lean Obama. Mitt will win a lot of counties state wide, but Obama will win the population centers.
 
I expect some fuckery to go down on Tuesday and Monday

Mittens will go down kicking & screaming like a bitch
 
Obama wins 290+ EVs
Dems pick up 2 seats in the Senate
Dems come within 5-10 seats in the house
 
Obama wins 290+ EVs
Dems pick up 2 seats in the Senate
Dems come within 5-10 seats in the house


That is key because if the House repugs keep standing in Obama's way 2014 is going to be a blood bath for the house repugs
 
Obama got Florida.

Hillsborough County (Tampa) has reported record Democratic turnout with early voting. Dems so far are leading repubs by 27,000 more votes. Orange County (Orlando) is going to lean Democrat. South Florida will also lean Obama. Mitt will win a lot of counties state wide, but Obama will win the population centers.



Good drop!



 
Personally I'm going to sleep early and deal with the results the next morning!
 
I will probably start watching FOX News to see how they try to spin this the second they announce that either Ohio, Virginia, Florida, or North Carolina goes into the Obama category. I can't envision a scenario where Romney gets to 270 without sweeping the 4 states above.
 


:yes::yes::yes:

FL is a wild one to call.

According to the 2010 U.S. Census, Florida had a population of 18,801,310. In terms of race and ethnicity, the state was:

75.0% White (57.9% Non-Hispanic White alone)
16.0% Black or African American
0.4% American Indian and Alaska Native
2.4% Asian
0.1% Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander
3.6% from Some Other Race
2.5% from Two or More Races

Hispanics and Latinos of any race made up 22.5% of the population

Not to derail the thread but WTF is "Some Other Race" and "Two or More Races"? :smh:
 
how do you see that happening

President Obama will win both Ohio and Florida. Once that happens and its announced, it's officially over for Mittens. I predict these two will be called before polls close in Cali, Nevada, Washington, etc....
 
President Obama will win both Ohio and Florida. Once that happens and its announced, it's officially over for Mittens. I predict these two will be called before polls close in Cali, Nevada, Washington, etc....
i'm gonna purchase a fifth of bombay gin and a twelve pack of leinenkugel for the celebration.

i get out of class tuesday at 6:25 p.m.. i'm gonna drive 100mph to get home and watch the results.
 
President Obama will win both Ohio and Florida. Once that happens and its announced, it's officially over for Mittens. I predict these two will be called before polls close in Cali, Nevada, Washington, etc....

obama won florida and ohio last cycle and the election was still not called until the polls out in cali closed...
 
obama won florida and ohio last cycle and the election was still not called until the polls out in cali closed...

The polls "were not called" but everyone knew it was game over with Ohio and FL. Same thing will happen this go around. Even if they wait to officialy call it when the polls close, it will be game over if/when Ohio and FL are called for President Obama.
 
I'm just curious, but how do you think President Obama would win?

Do you think it's more enthusiasm for the president this time around, than 2008?

I'm just trying to hear the other side's story on this one.
 
I'm just curious, but how do you think President Obama would win?

Do you think it's more enthusiasm for the president this time around, than 2008?

I'm just trying to hear the other side's story on this one.

I have a better idea. Map out a realistically plausible scenario where Romney gets to 270. I have yet to hear one that doesn't include something completely outrageous such as Romney will take Pennsylvania or Romney is going to take Minnesota. Obama has just as good a chance of taking Arizona or Georgia
 
I'm just curious, but how do you think President Obama would win?

Do you think it's more enthusiasm for the president this time around, than 2008?

I'm just trying to hear the other side's story on this one.

by winning all the states hes ahead in. now how is romney going to get to 270?
 
I'm just curious, but how do you think President Obama would win?

Do you think it's more enthusiasm for the president this time around, than 2008?

I'm just trying to hear the other side's story on this one.

for one reason one of the "swing states" is voting to legalize weed and that is going to bring out young vote...


for another reason everybody has said it would take a perfect storm for Romney to gain the electoral college votes need to be president...

on my final note if you want to be a republican that is your choice but how in thee fuck could you vote for romney????
 
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we will not be disenfranchised!
and to our beloved CAC members:​

<a href="http://s1214.beta.photobucket.com/user/hz_xlnc/library/" target="_blank"><img src="http://i1214.photobucket.com/albums/cc485/hz_xlnc/redkneckanize.gif" border="0" alt="Photobucket"/></a>
 
Damn Dec 17th.....im looking forward to December 21 2012.
Its a wrap for all of us.


Not to derail the thread but WTF is "Some Other Race" and "Two or More Races"? :smh:

"Some Other Race" is reserved for people of color who are ashamed to be apart of their "race"; e.g., Blacks that claim they have Indian in their families, Mexicans that identify with Whites most of the time, but claim to be native American while trying to justify breaking immigration laws, etc etc.
 
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