Thursday, March 31, 2016

The Dying of the Light for John Kasich.

To some degree what we are seeing at the moment is that John Kasich’s theory of the Republican race was flawed. John Kasich wanted to go to New Hampshire and come in second, and he did. John Kasich wanted to win the battle for his home state of Ohio, and he did, in relatively impressive fashion. The problem is that outside of these two states John Kasich does not have much to talk about. He is more than 5 million votes behind Trump and a little less than 3 million votes behind Cruz. Kasich’s troubles are also reflected in the delegate count. His argument about being stronger in the general election and being just an overall better candidate may well be true. But he can’t duck the fact that ultimately such decisions are made by the voters.

We see where the voters are in two polls that came out today. In the Wisconsin Public Policy Poll Kasich registers just 17%, trailing Cruz at 38% and Trump at 37%. In New York, the new Quinnipiac poll has John Kasich again in third with 19% compared to 56% for Trump and 20% for Cruz. Whatever regional strength Kasich may have in the other Northeastern states a week later, it is very hard to be the third guy in the race, who repeatedly comes in third. In short, while a distant third in Wisconsin might not actually turn off the lights on the Kasich campaign, it will be quite difficult for him to sustain the thrust of his argument if such an outcome occurs. Voters who might more naturally fall into the Kasich camp may nonetheless feel compelled to choose between what seems like their true remaining options.   This was clearly evidenced earlier in the campaign by Rubio’s post-super-Tuesday collapse. When voters saw things edging in Cruz’s direction Rubio dropped from 18.7% in Alabama on March 1st to 5.1% in Mississippi just a week later. There’s not that much difference between Mississippi and Alabama in what their ideal preferences would be. But Rubio’s slightly weaker performances in earlier contests were enough to signal his decline. Kasich’s showing looks likely to do the same signaling. This is mostly good news for Ted Cruz, but it does somewhat complicate the next month for him, as there may not be enough time to turn around the Northeast. So Trump may have a good month before another showdown in Indiana on May 3rd. Without a better than expected performance in Wisconsin the door will pretty much close on John Kasich.

Share:

0 comments:

Post a Comment

The Scorecard

The Scorecard

The Scorecard is a political strategy and analysis blog. Our hope is to provide information and insight that can be found nowhere else into how and why things are happening in American politics. Unlike many political pundits, we will tell you who we think is going to win as an election approaches; we will tell you why; and we will give you a sense of our level of confidence. Ours is a holistic approach, one that takes in as many numbers as possible but is also willing to look past the numbers if need be. When we turn out to have been wrong, we will let you know. When we are right, we’ll let you know that too.

Our Delegate Math


Delegate Count


Delegate Contests

About Me

Delegate Count

Author Jason Paul is a longtime political operative who got his start as an intern in 2002. He has been a political forecaster for almost as long. He won the 2006 Swing State Project election prediction contest and has won two other local contests. He had the pulse of Obama-Clinton race in 2008 and has been as good as anyone at delegate math in the 2016 race. He looks forwards to providing quality coverage for the remainder of the 2016 race.

Blog Archive