Thanks to Walking the Berkshires, I’ve discovered the Connecticut Local Politics site, which has some great maps of past elections in the Nutmeg State — as well as the cartograph […]
Nifty Nutmeg State maps
Lay of the Land: Michigan GOP primary
After winning the New Hampshire primary for the second time, next week John McCain will try to repeat his 2000 win in Michigan. The map below gives some idea of […]
The disappearance of Mitt Romney’s New Hampshire
As I noted last night, Hillary Clinton’s suprising win in the New Hampshire primary may be linked to Mitt Romney’s surprisingly weak (by historical standards) showing in the state’s most […]
Hillary Rodham Gore?
A few days ago I wondered whether Hillary Clinton could replicate the geographical pattern that gave Al Gore a narrow margin over Bill Bradley in the New Hampshire primary eight […]
The California test
Watch for dozens of polls in Super Tuesday states to come out a week or so after the New Hampshire primary results come in tonight. The biggest signal of how […]
Did Romney cost Obama the New Hampshire primary?
Hillary Clinton seems to have narrowly upset Barack Obama in the New Hampshire Democratic primary, while John McCain beat Mitt Romney by a comfortable margin on the Republican side. Interestingly, […]
Will Hillary play in Gore’s New Hampshire strongholds?
As we wait for the New Hampshire results, we can ponder the map from the last tight Democratic primary here, when Al Gore defeated Bill Bradley by about 6,000 votes […]
Is the Bay State’s one-party system killing Mitt Romney?
Last night’s Republican presidential debate provided pretty solid evidence for the theory that the other candidates have a special dislike for former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney. All of them except […]
Iowa: Obama holds Kerry strongholds, Huckabee takes anti-Bush counties
A quick glance at the returns from Thursday’s Iowa caucuses (see county-by-county results here) shows that Democrat Barack Obama came somewhat close to replicating John Kerry’s patterns of strength (see […]
Neglect for Howard Dean Country?
In order for Howard Dean to win the 2004 Democratic primary, he needed to roll up big margins in the communities near the Vermont border and come reasonably close to […]
Who the heck is Pat Buchanan?
Our previous post looked at the last competitive New Hampshire primary on the Democratic side. Below is a depiction of candidates’ strongholds in the last competitive Republican primary: 1996, when […]
Bad day in Iowa for the geezer vote
According to the "entrance poll" reported in the New York Times, Obama was as popular among women as among men (35 percent in both cases), but there was a huge […]
Can Obama repeat Iowa?
As others have already noted, in almost every presidential campaign there’s a candidate who says he or she is going to win on the basis of new voters (especially young […]
Ringing in the New Year on the T
“Peace and quiet. It has a nice ring to it” proclaim the newest ads in the MBTA’s “Courtesy counts” remedial public civility campaign. Surely they jest. With the advent of […]
Solace for Iowa’s losers?
While we wait for the Iowa results (and the maps they’ll bring!), here is a simple chart showing that a win in Iowa doesn’t necessarily act as a "slingshot" guaranteeing […]
Where the Iowa bounce works in New Hampshire
Our previous post showed that New Hampshire primary voters don’t always fall in line with the choices of Iowa caucus-goers. Here’s some geographical context on the Democratic side. A backlash […]
New Hampshire is rubber, Iowa is glue
The "Iowa bounce" is of dubious reliability in both parties (see previous posts), but Republican voters in New Hampshire seem especially resistant to it. Each of the winners in the […]
The two (or three) faces of Iowa
With the Iowa caucuses little more than a week away, the holiday season is already over for political bloggers. I’m not rash enough to make predictions, and I can’t add […]
More municipal meltdown
Posting may be relatively light for the next week or two, while the CommonWealth magazine staff work on the Winter issue, but there will be new maps and data before […]
Dynasty: The Senate members
The role of political dynasties in American politics is once again a hot political topic, thanks to the frontrunner for the Democratic presidential nomination (Hillary Clinton, wife of a former […]
Dropping out of high school, dropping into jail
The end of the year brings many gifts to data lovers, and two non-unrelated reports hit computer screens today: the Department of Justice’s annual prison population census and the Department […]
Is your City Hall sinking?
Gabrielle Gurley’s article Municipal Meltdown, in the Fall issue of CommonWealth, is both fascinating and scary, and we’ve been getting a lot of reaction to the idea that cities and […]
The geography of job insecurity
The Boston Globe’s Adrian Walker writes today on the slow progress in creating pilot schools in Boston. Part of the resisistance comes from teachers’ union members: To their supporters, pilot […]
The Snowmeister factor
Correspondent Chris V. asks: If you have not done an article yet on how the moving of the primaries to Super Tuesday in February could lead to weather deciding who […]
