dusman
Member
- Joined
- Jul 7, 2011
- Messages
- 2,376
Here is my fun, unofficial prediction for the coming months. (My methodology is partly wishful thinking.. you have been warned).
November 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 22-27%
Carson - 17-19%
Rubio - 13-15%
Bush - 10-12%
Cruz - 10-12%
Paul - 7-8%
Fiorina - 3-5%
Christie - 2-3%
Huckabee - 1-2%
Kasich - Drops
December 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 20-25%
Rubio - 19-23%
Carson - 12-16%
Bush - 11-14%
Paul - 10-12%
Cruz - 7-9%
Huckabee - Drops
Christie - Drops
January 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 19-23%
Rubio - 17-20%
Bush - 14-18%
Paul - 12-15%
Cruz - 7-9%
Fiorina - Drops
Carson - In a shocker.. Carson drops and shows support for Rand once Paul passes him in the polls. I think we see Carson dip below 10% between Dec 15 and Jan 15. Carson seeing that his support has bottomed out, decides that throwing his support behind Paul has more significance than staying in the race. This to the surprise of everyone.
Between Jan 15 and Feb 1 the media coverage gets dominated by the surprise drop of Carson. We will see a lot of talk about Rand and a lot of negative media to prevent Carson support from moving his way. I think we also see Cruz make a small resurgence from some media hype over this same time frame.. similar to what we saw with Santorum in 2012. This being solely for the purpose of getting Carson support to shift to Cruz to siphon Paul's effectiveness in Iowa.
However, there will also be a lot of talk that Rand may come out of Iowa the winner due to organization on the ground and his rise in the polls. He'll be coined the dark horse. Attacks will be divided between Rand, Trump and Rubio to prop up Bush. Rubio will take the worst dive in the polls as a result and the narrative will become a "Bush surge".
February 1, 2015 Polls
Trump - 18-22%
Bush - 16-20%
Rubio - 14-18%
Paul - 14-18%
Cruz - 12-15%
Iowa.. it will be the most unusual caucus we've seen in the past 20 years, if Carson drops beforehand. There will be so much uncertainty going in that the media will probably seriously downplay the results. Iowa will make or break Trump. If he wins, he will take New Hampshire and Nevada and Paul loses relevance. It will become a two way race between Bush and Trump. If Carson sticks around, I think Paul has less chance to win Iowa.
However, I think the efforts to suppress Trump works with Iowa voters and at the same time Carson drops. Rand gets a surprise win in Iowa, but the media downplays the win, chocking it up to simply getting college students out to caucus and they continue to talk about the Bush surge and his second place showing reflecting a turn in voter sentiment. I think Trump comes in third, shocking half the GOP.. while the other half celebrates.. which dominates the media up to New Hampshire. The media will be more dominated by talking about Trump's epic fall instead of Rand's surprise win.
Iowa Results:
Paul - 22-24%
Bush - 21-23%
Trump - 19-21%
Rubio - 15-18%
Cruz - 12-14%
February 9, 2015 Polls
Bush - 22-24%
Trump - 18-22%
Rand - 17-21%
Rubio - 12-15%
Cruz - 10-12%
After Iowa I think we see the most divided polling of the race, with the top 3 potentially all within the margin of error. Nationwide, there are still doubts about Rand Paul as the nominee.. but in New Hampshire a buzz develops over Paul. Meanwhile, Bush and Trump attack each other to prevent one or the other winning New Hampshire. Trump is seen as a sore loser from Iowa (and for the first time his defensive side comes out) and that's how Bush frames it. This is the first time we see anyone over take Trump in the polls. Bush, though, raises a lot of concerns in the base about his establishment roots and a small portion of Trump's support moves to Paul as the new anti-establishment vote. New Hampshire takes a particularly jaded view of Bush.
Both candidates also go after Paul, giving Paul much needed media attention and voters begin to see Rand Paul in a different light. With his win in Iowa.. Rand's demeanor changes slightly.. in a way that emboldens him, makes him less unsettled to attacks and more confident during interviews. Rand in contrast to Trump and Bush starts to gain favorability. Rubio's poor performance in Iowa and his drop in the polls kills his campaign and his support splits between Paul and Trump in New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Results:
Paul - 30-32%
Trump - 27-29%
Bush - 25-28%
Rubio - 2-5%
Cruz - 2-5%
I think due to Trump's third place finish and Rand's first place finish, we see Rand win New Hampshire. I think this only happens if Trump gets third in Iowa. If Rand wins Iowa and Trump comes in second, I think we see Trump win New Hampshire and Rand gets third behind Bush.
Outlook After New Hampshire
If the cards play out as above, Rand takes the helm as the anti-establishment candidate against Bush. I think Trump sticks around after a Nevada win up to Super Tuesday and we see a legitimate 3-way race. If Rand holds up in Texas and onward through to the convention.. the establishment will make an aggressive effort to prevent a Paul nomination and we will see a bitter fight on the floor, leading to a brokered convention. It is here where our experience and convention rule knowledge will get tested most. If Paul wins the nomination, I think we see Trump run as an Independent. If Bush wins, I think he loses to Hillary in the general.
I think Paul wins the presidency if he gets the nomination and Trump decides not to run Independent.
How do you see the next few months playing out?
November 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 22-27%
Carson - 17-19%
Rubio - 13-15%
Bush - 10-12%
Cruz - 10-12%
Paul - 7-8%
Fiorina - 3-5%
Christie - 2-3%
Huckabee - 1-2%
Kasich - Drops
December 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 20-25%
Rubio - 19-23%
Carson - 12-16%
Bush - 11-14%
Paul - 10-12%
Cruz - 7-9%
Huckabee - Drops
Christie - Drops
January 15, 2015 Polls
Trump - 19-23%
Rubio - 17-20%
Bush - 14-18%
Paul - 12-15%
Cruz - 7-9%
Fiorina - Drops
Carson - In a shocker.. Carson drops and shows support for Rand once Paul passes him in the polls. I think we see Carson dip below 10% between Dec 15 and Jan 15. Carson seeing that his support has bottomed out, decides that throwing his support behind Paul has more significance than staying in the race. This to the surprise of everyone.
Between Jan 15 and Feb 1 the media coverage gets dominated by the surprise drop of Carson. We will see a lot of talk about Rand and a lot of negative media to prevent Carson support from moving his way. I think we also see Cruz make a small resurgence from some media hype over this same time frame.. similar to what we saw with Santorum in 2012. This being solely for the purpose of getting Carson support to shift to Cruz to siphon Paul's effectiveness in Iowa.
However, there will also be a lot of talk that Rand may come out of Iowa the winner due to organization on the ground and his rise in the polls. He'll be coined the dark horse. Attacks will be divided between Rand, Trump and Rubio to prop up Bush. Rubio will take the worst dive in the polls as a result and the narrative will become a "Bush surge".
February 1, 2015 Polls
Trump - 18-22%
Bush - 16-20%
Rubio - 14-18%
Paul - 14-18%
Cruz - 12-15%
Iowa.. it will be the most unusual caucus we've seen in the past 20 years, if Carson drops beforehand. There will be so much uncertainty going in that the media will probably seriously downplay the results. Iowa will make or break Trump. If he wins, he will take New Hampshire and Nevada and Paul loses relevance. It will become a two way race between Bush and Trump. If Carson sticks around, I think Paul has less chance to win Iowa.
However, I think the efforts to suppress Trump works with Iowa voters and at the same time Carson drops. Rand gets a surprise win in Iowa, but the media downplays the win, chocking it up to simply getting college students out to caucus and they continue to talk about the Bush surge and his second place showing reflecting a turn in voter sentiment. I think Trump comes in third, shocking half the GOP.. while the other half celebrates.. which dominates the media up to New Hampshire. The media will be more dominated by talking about Trump's epic fall instead of Rand's surprise win.
Iowa Results:
Paul - 22-24%
Bush - 21-23%
Trump - 19-21%
Rubio - 15-18%
Cruz - 12-14%
February 9, 2015 Polls
Bush - 22-24%
Trump - 18-22%
Rand - 17-21%
Rubio - 12-15%
Cruz - 10-12%
After Iowa I think we see the most divided polling of the race, with the top 3 potentially all within the margin of error. Nationwide, there are still doubts about Rand Paul as the nominee.. but in New Hampshire a buzz develops over Paul. Meanwhile, Bush and Trump attack each other to prevent one or the other winning New Hampshire. Trump is seen as a sore loser from Iowa (and for the first time his defensive side comes out) and that's how Bush frames it. This is the first time we see anyone over take Trump in the polls. Bush, though, raises a lot of concerns in the base about his establishment roots and a small portion of Trump's support moves to Paul as the new anti-establishment vote. New Hampshire takes a particularly jaded view of Bush.
Both candidates also go after Paul, giving Paul much needed media attention and voters begin to see Rand Paul in a different light. With his win in Iowa.. Rand's demeanor changes slightly.. in a way that emboldens him, makes him less unsettled to attacks and more confident during interviews. Rand in contrast to Trump and Bush starts to gain favorability. Rubio's poor performance in Iowa and his drop in the polls kills his campaign and his support splits between Paul and Trump in New Hampshire.
New Hampshire Results:
Paul - 30-32%
Trump - 27-29%
Bush - 25-28%
Rubio - 2-5%
Cruz - 2-5%
I think due to Trump's third place finish and Rand's first place finish, we see Rand win New Hampshire. I think this only happens if Trump gets third in Iowa. If Rand wins Iowa and Trump comes in second, I think we see Trump win New Hampshire and Rand gets third behind Bush.
Outlook After New Hampshire
If the cards play out as above, Rand takes the helm as the anti-establishment candidate against Bush. I think Trump sticks around after a Nevada win up to Super Tuesday and we see a legitimate 3-way race. If Rand holds up in Texas and onward through to the convention.. the establishment will make an aggressive effort to prevent a Paul nomination and we will see a bitter fight on the floor, leading to a brokered convention. It is here where our experience and convention rule knowledge will get tested most. If Paul wins the nomination, I think we see Trump run as an Independent. If Bush wins, I think he loses to Hillary in the general.
I think Paul wins the presidency if he gets the nomination and Trump decides not to run Independent.
How do you see the next few months playing out?
Last edited: