McCain Campaign Believes West Virginia is in Play

Yesterday Carnacki highlighted polling from the generally unreliable American Research Group showing Barack Obama leading in West Virginia by a 50 percent to 42 percent margin. While I think there's no way the race actually looks like that -- if you take ARG polling out of the mix, John McCain leads in the state by a 47.5 percent to 40.8 percent margin -- there are some indications that the state is closer than many believed it would be. However, even more important than the polling is the make up of the group believing the state to be in play -- a group that apparently includes the McCain campaign.

n what may be another signal that the troubled economy is forcing John McCain's campaign to play electoral map defense, Sarah Palin has scheduled a bus tour for Sunday through West Virginia, a state that's been leaning red throughout this presidential race.

Palin had already scheduled a bus tour of Pennsylvania on Saturday, but she will now repeat that act on Sunday by making various unannounced stops throughout West Virginia, culminating in a campaign event in southeast Ohio. It's a swing geographically reminiscent of Hillary Clinton's effort during the Democratic primary to court white working class voters in Appalachia. Clinton won the West Virginia primary over Barack Obama by a whopping 67-26 margin.

If you had told me two weeks ago, two months ago, or even two years ago that the Republican Vice Presidential nominee was going to be campaigning in West Virginia three weeks out from election day, I wouldn't have believed you for a second. First of all, if the GOP ticket was hitting the hustings in West Virginia, that would mean that the marginally blue states basically weren't in play, and that even the states that have been close but have swung towards the Republicans in recent years were moving too close to the Democratic column.

But beyond that, there aren't a whole lot of states in the nation that are trending away from the Democrats and towards the Republicans, but West Virginia has sure looked like one of them, going from a comfortable 51.5 percent to 36.8 percent win for Bill Clinton in 1996 to a comfortable 56.0 percent to 43.2 percent win for George W. Bush in 2004. What's more, the chattering class quickly settled on the narrative following Hillary Clinton's big win in the West Virginia primary in May that there was no way that Obama could carry the state in the general election. But it increasingly looks like the conventional wisdom was wrong and West Virginia is in play.



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I'm betting Obama wins big in the EC (none / 0)

But, if you make me bet, I think McCain just squeaks out a win in WV...

I would surely love to be proven wrong.


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by WashStateBlue on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 07:21:08 PM EST

Really unpleasant thought... (none / 0)

West Virginia, whatever you think about it, was where the news media went during primaries to get all the best quotations from uncertain voters openly admitting racial "uneasiness" with Obama.

Given the disgusting, racist tone of McCain and Palin's recent events, might they be going there to intentionally provoke a racial incident at one of their own rallies to gin up race as an issue in the campaign? Create some big racial kerfuffle that even though it looks bad for them, gets them attention and lets them squawk angrily about the liberal media creating controversies.

I know, it sounds crazy, but how else do you explain them going there? There's no possible version of this race where West Virginia is the deciding vote. Maybe it's literally a play to activate the racist vote nationwide.


by Siguy on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 07:45:58 PM EST

Strange, but could be true... (none / 0)

I did hear an NPR interview with a woman from WV, identified as a Democrat, saying she probably couldn't vote for Obama because of his race.

There surely will be some people Palin can pull on stage like her, for a dog and pony show.

But, is that Really what John McCain want's as his legacy in history books?

"In the last days of what became know as the Southern Strategy, Senator John McCain harkened back to it's orginator, Richard Nixon, and played the Dixicrat Card, making one of his only stands in the state of West Virginia, where he openly campaigned with a racial background, and used a dying strategy to carry that state for the Republican party. In the elections following, in 2012, and 2018, West Virginia become a soldly Democratic state, and part of what become, based on President Barack Obama's landslide electoral strategy "The New SouthWest Strategy" where a strangelhold on an shifting demographic and a dominant position in the new Latino voting block shifted the political power to the Democrats for the next two decades...."


Support the separation of Church and State: Vote YES on WA R-71!
by WashStateBlue on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 07:58:23 PM EST
[ Parent ]

he's not winning in WV (none / 0)

because the racist stuff is about to come out now until November. We're seeing it in the McCain camp is now going hard on Ayers and trying to link Michelle to him too. Don't count on WV, and a lot more people are gonna be using "Hussein" in the run up till election day, you see. In WV for sure, that bodes poorly for Obama


by Lakrosse on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 07:55:03 PM EST

Re: he's not winning in WV (none / 0)

Let them rile up the Ayers and Wright folk to win West Virginia, but it is turning off folk in North Carolina and Florida and other places.

I think it is rather stupid of the McCain camp to get this desperate to win racist voters to get West Virginia when it is only 5 EV and was really never a major part of the Obama campaign.


by gavoter on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 09:47:19 PM EST
[ Parent ]

don't underestimate eastern NC and (none / 0)

the Redneck Riviera. If McCain gets those folk to turnout, then his racism may work. After all with West Virginia, its like Maine in 2004, was close sometimes, Kerry even losing it at others, but it was never gonna go for Bush, the way WV won't go Obama.


by Lakrosse on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 09:59:44 PM EST
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Re: don't underestimate eastern NC and (none / 0)

McCain is Splunging, did you not get that Memo?


1st Law of Obamadynamics: For every action, there is a greater than equal criticism. In advance.
by QTG on Fri Oct 10, 2008 at 10:49:31 PM EST
[ Parent ]

facts are stubborn things... (none / 0)

I don't understand your logic, Lakrosse. This is a reliably Democratic state who voted for Bush twice for President. Otherwise, there's barely a whiff of Republican traction at any other level.

There's lots of reasons to believe West Virginia is in play for Obama.

The state Democratic Party and the unions are firmly behind Obama and working hard for him here. Both candidates have been running ads this month. Obama supporters are making tons of voter contacts (phone and door-to-door).

Obama has done a great job of countering the usual "gun-grabber" nonsense that lost Gore the election. "God and gays" just ain't cutting it with the economic woes. Besides, there's never been any love for McCain in this state. On paper, he can't win here either.

But, someone has to win, why not Obama?


Visit West Virginia Blue
by WVaBlue on Sat Oct 11, 2008 at 07:47:44 AM EST
[ Parent ]


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