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Santorum Strikes Back!

Posted By PK    Last updated February 10th, 2012 6 Comments

We’ve had our first major upset of the Republican primary!

On Tuesday, there were 3 major events in the Republican primary calendar.  Both Minnesota and Colorado held caucuses while Missouri held a non-binding primary.  Going into the night, Santorum was expected to win Missouri (he had been campaigning there, while other candidates had been avoiding it) and likely to win Minnesota as well.  Colorado, having similar demographics to Nevada (although having a notably smaller Mormon population) was expected to grant Romney a victory.  In fact, prior to voting in Colorado, betting site Intrade had Romney at 97% to win the state.  To riff off a common sports phrase?  That’s why they count the votes!

The New Normal

At this point in the race, for all the talk about Mitt Romney’s “inevitability”, the truth is he’s actually won less states than Rick Santorum.  Rick Santorum has won Colorado, Minnesota, Missouri, and Iowa while  Mr. Romney has won Nevada, Florida and New Hampshire.  The last contest, South Carolina, went to Newt Gingrich.  Ron Paul has not yet won a primary or caucus, but he did register his first second place finish in Minnesota yesterday.

Yesterday puts a huge dent in Mr. Romney’s inevitability argument.  While still the expected Republican candidate in the general election against President Barack Obama, Intrade is now showing his chances hovering around 80%, while Mr. Santorum has 13%, Mr. Gingrich 3% and Ron Paul 3%.

And a look at how all the votes cast on February 7th add up (adding the three states together):

And here is a similar graph which includes all votes cast up to February 8th (the next vote of note is the caucus straw poll in Maine on the 11th).

Challenging Inevitability

Mitt Romney: Inevitable?  No, but he’ll likely still be the Republican nominee.  Even though he has been out-hustled in the organizationally heavy caucus states (he won Nevada but lost 3 other caucuses to Rick Santorum), he still has the overall organizational muscle, cash, and support to go the distance.  I wouldn’t be surprised to see one of the other candidates drop out after Super Tuesday – and that’s when the “Non-Romney” vote theory can be tested.

For all the interest and drama in the Republican primary, Mitt Romney is still the likely nominee.  However, remember Mitt Romney lost to the guy who lost to the guy in the White House – Barack Obama.  The betting market, which had once been pricing Barack Obama at around 50% to win, is now up to almost 61%.  Of course, the market implies a 67% chance of Republican House of Representatives Control and a 75.1% chance of Senate Republican control.

The most likely result?  President Obama will get a second term and Republicans will control Congress.  The last time American government was divided in that manner (under Bill Clinton, with Newt Gingrich as Speaker of the House), the budget was balanced and the deficit was reduced.  We could do worse!  Your thoughts?


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Filed Under: Politics Tagged With: mitt romney, newt gingrich, popular vote, republican primaries, rick santorum, ron paul

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  • http://www.thadthoughts.com/ Thad Puckett

    Very good analysis.  I haven’t been following the Senate and House races much, so not sure if your allusion to the 90s will bear out, but we certainly have to get our financial house in order.  

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      You caught me while I was online – instant analysis!

      I haven’t been following the races too closely, but just from timing I know the Senate has to be in play. The 2006 elections would have set the current crop of Senate candidates, and as that was the second midterm under President Bush (II) it was pretty much a Democratic revolving door that year. The House is always active since they come up every two years, which means the Republicans are on their heels a little more.

      For the Republicans, a silver lining to an Obama reelection would be (assumed) great performance in 2014 unless the economic recovery accelerated and the President was able to claim credit (this downside for them is also very possible).

  • http://www.20sfinances.com 20sFinances

    I have to agree that Obama is almost guaranteed another term. It’s too bad there isn’t a real election, but considering all of the division, Obama could use another 4 years to get to do more stuff. But then again, I could just be overly optimistic that he cares…

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      Yeah – Obama’s chances are very good, but I wouldn’t expect him to be able to enact the same agenda he was able to pass in his first two years in office. The most likely result is going to be divided government – so it’s possible Obama pivots towards the center (a la Bill Clinton’s second term).

      The truth is, American rarely vote out a party (or a person) when they have just 4 years in office. Since this is the first 4 years of incumbency for a Democrat, there is a positive effect working in Obama favor (the estimate I see most puts the incumbency effect at a whopping 6 points). I haven’t seen it mentioned once in the media, but it’s one of the reasons I think the Republican bench is stocked, while the candidates in the game don’t get too much love. It’s strategy – the ‘bench’ knows Obama has a massive advantage, and are biding their time for 2016.

  • http://thecollegeinvestor.com/ The College Investor

    I think the only way Republicans have a chance at the presidency is with Romney.  Santorum is too conservative socially to appeal to the middle 10% of moderates (the vote that swings most elections).  Romney, at least, is electable to this group.  However, going against Obama, he may be too similar to really convince anyone not to just continue with Obama.

    • http://www.dqydj.net/ PK

      The Republicans seemed to have figured it out in the beginning – make it a clear economic choice. I don’t know what happened in the middle – somewhere around the intraparty attacks on Mitt Romney’s overseas accounts, tax rate, and wealth it went astray… and there has been a fascination with social issues lately.

      Social issues are great to care about if that’s your style, but I doubt a Republican will win in 2012 on social issues. This is an economic election, and in my opinion spending is a huge deal.

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