Republicans spent a lot of emotional energy on California in 2010,  believing for most of the year that they had a serious chance at winning  the races for Senate and Governor.  They won't have to deal with false  hope followed by disappointment next year- voters in the state strongly  dislike all of the leading Republican Presidential candidates and Barack  Obama defeats each of them by a wide margin in the state.  It's pretty  clear 21 months out this time that GOP hopes in California are just  about zero.
Obama is popular in the state, although not  overwhelmingly so, with 53% of voters approving of his job performance  to 41% who disapprove.  Usually those kinds of numbers alone wouldn't  lead to the sorts of margins he has over the Republican field, which are  15 points over Mike Huckabee at 54-39, 20 points over Mitt Romney at  56-36, 24 points over Newt Gingrich at 58-34, and a whooping 31 points  over Sarah Palin at 62-31.
What allows Obama to hold his large  leads is the incredible unpopularity of the Republican candidate field.   None of the candidates can top a 32% favorability there- that's Mitt  Romney who is, relatively speaking, the 'most popular' of the Republican  candidates.  46% of voters have an unfavorable opinion of him.  After  that it's Mike Huckabee at a 29/47 spread, Newt Gingrich at 25/55, and  Sarah Palin at 28% rating her favorably and a whooping 67% saying they  have a negative opinion of her.
Palin's 31 point deficit in  California would be the first time a Republican candidate lost the state  by more than 30 points since Alf Landon went down in Franklin D.  Roosevelt's first reelection in 1936.  It's been a week of potential  history making for Palin in our polls.  She trailed Obama by 8 points in  South Dakota, which would make her the first Republican to lose that  state since 1964.  She trailed him by 6 points in South Carolina, which  would mark the first Democratic win there since 1976.  She trailed him  by 8 in Arizona, which Democrats have only won once since 1948 and  certainly not by that kind of margin.  And although she led by a point  in Nebraska she'd be perilously close to being the first Republican to  lose that state since 1964 even though Democrats haven't come within 15  points of winning statewide since Barry Goldwater.
In the  California match ups Obama benefits partly because of a unified  Democratic base but also because of an overwhelming advantage with  independents and because even Republicans are somewhat hesitant to  commit to supporting this crop of candidates.  With independents he's up  19 points on Romney, 20 on Huckabee, 31 on Gingrich, and 44 on Palin.   And while Obama takes anywhere from 82-90% of the Democratic vote in the  four match ups, Huckabee has only 77% of Republicans supporting him and  that goes down to 75% for Romney, 71% for Gingrich, and 67% for Palin.
Looks  pretty safe to say California will easily remain in the Democratic  column next year barring some incredible change in the political  landscape.
Full results here
Saturday, February 5, 2011
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6 comments:
"...Democrats haven't come within 15 points of winning statewide [in Nebraska] since Barry Goldwater."
In 2008, Barack Obama lost Nebraska by 14.93 percentage points.
And I tell you right now, the hispanic component in this is off. In 2012, the hispanic vote will go through the roof: the asian vote as well.
In 2008, Obama won CA with a 24.03% margin, the largest winning margin since 1936.
I suspect he will close in on a +29% to +30% margin this time around, due largely to increased minority voting.
These 55 EV are absolutely guaranteed to stay in the democratic column.
Did you poll the California presidential primary 2012?
What about Huntsman?
Yes, we polled the primary, as we always do, and we only ever poll these 4 against Obama unless there's a home-state candidate.
California is quite likely to stay Democratic in 2012, but there is a narrative that supports it being more competitive. In particular, Democrats are going to have to do unpopular things in California. Raising taxes or cutting spending or a combination of both. There is likely to be some kind of backlash there unless the economy takes off.
I would also not rely on hispanics over much for supporting Democrats. Even if hispanics vote in historic numbers, they don't have a high enough margin to move the final result too much. Whitman and Fiorina still got over 30% of the hispanic vote.
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