Will Obama or Romney Break Any Records Tuesday?
Obama set the all-time Democratic presidential statewide victory margin marks in Delaware and Vermont (and D.C.) four years ago
One of the story lines running over the past few weeks has been how Mitt Romney is running even or perhaps ahead of Barack Obama in the popular vote, but probably trailing in the electoral vote.
The reason for that discrepancy is as follows: Romney is expected to rack up larger victory margins in states won by John McCain in 2008, while Obama is expected to give back only a few states he won last cycle but also record narrower victories in the remainder of the traditional blue states.
In some states, the president has a lot of room to give.
A Smart Politics review of 180 years of presidential election data finds that Barack Obama set the record for the largest Democratic victory margin in Delaware, Vermont, and the District of Columbia in 2008.
Obama carried Vermont by 37.0 points over McCain four years ago, besting the previous Democratic mark of 32.6 points set by Lyndon Johnson in 1964.
Although skewing Democratic in big numbers across the last few cycles, Vermont has the distinction of holding the all-time U.S. record of voting for a Republican presidential candidate in 27 consecutive cycles, from 1856 to 1960.
Obama won Delaware in 2008 by 25.0 points, which also eclipsed LBJ’s mark from 1964 of 22.2 points.
Obama won the District of Columbia by 85.9 points in 2008. The District’s Top 5 largest victory margins have occurred progressively over the last five cycles with Clinton winning by 75.6 points in 1992 and 75.9 points in 1996, Gore winning by 76.2 points in 2000, and Kerry winning by 79.8 points in 2004.
Overall, the largest Democratic margins of victory across the 50 states and D.C. are held by eight different nominees, with 39 of these records held by Andrew Jackson, FDR, and LBJ:
· Andrew Jackson notched the best Democratic mark in 10 states – one from his 1828 run (Pennsylvania) and nine from his reelection victory in 1832 (Alabama, Georgia, Illinois, Indiana, Mississippi, Missouri, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia).
· Martin Van Buren owns the biggest Democratic victory in New Hampshire (1836).
· Horatio Seymour claims Kentucky and Maryland (both in 1868).
· Grover Cleveland holds the mark in Florida (1892).
· William Jennings Bryan set Democratic records in the then newly-minted western states of Colorado, Idaho, Montana, Nevada, and Utah (all in 1896).
· Franklin Roosevelt owns the best marks in nine states from 1932 (Arkansas, Kansas, Louisiana, Nebraska, New Mexico, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Dakota, and Texas) and another eight states from 1936 (Arizona, California, Minnesota, Oregon, South Carolina, Washington, Wisconsin, and Wyoming).
· Lyndon Johnson set the record in a dozen states during his 1964 blowout victory over Barry Goldwater: Alaska, Connecticut, Hawaii, Iowa, Maine, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Ohio, Rhode Island, and West Virginia.
Largest Democratic Presidential Nominee Margin of Victory by State, 1828-2008
State
|
DEM Nominee
|
Year
|
MoV
|
Alabama
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
99.9
|
Alaska
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
31.8
|
Arizona
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
42.9
|
Arkansas
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
73.1
|
California
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
35.3
|
Colorado
|
William Jennings Bryan
|
1896
|
71.1
|
Connecticut
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
35.7
|
D.C.
|
Barack Obama
|
2008
|
85.9
|
Delaware
|
Barack Obama
|
2008
|
25.0
|
Florida
|
Grover Cleveland
|
1892
|
71.4
|
Georgia
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
100.0
|
Hawaii
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
57.5
|
Idaho
|
William Jennings Bryan
|
1896
|
56.8
|
Illinois
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
36.6
|
Indiana
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
34.2
|
Iowa
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
24.0
|
Kansas
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
9.4
|
Kentucky
|
Horatio Seymour
|
1868
|
49.1
|
Louisiana
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
85.8
|
Maine
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
37.7
|
Maryland
|
Horatio Seymour
|
1868
|
34.4
|
Massachusetts
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
52.7
|
Michigan
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
33.6
|
Minnesota
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
30.8
|
Mississippi
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
100.0
|
Missouri
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
100.0
|
Montana
|
William Jennings Bryan
|
1896
|
60.2
|
Nebraska
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
27.7
|
Nevada
|
William Jennings Bryan
|
1896
|
62.4
|
New Hampshire
|
Martin Van Buren
|
1836
|
50.0
|
New Jersey
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
31.8
|
New Mexico
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
27.0
|
New York
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
37.3
|
North Carolina
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
69.5
|
North Dakota
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
41.6
|
Ohio
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
25.9
|
Oklahoma
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
46.6
|
Oregon
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
34.8
|
Pennsylvania
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1828
|
33.3
|
Rhode Island
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
61.7
|
South Carolina
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
97.2
|
South Dakota
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
29.2
|
Tennessee
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
90.8
|
Texas
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1932
|
76.7
|
Utah
|
William Jennings Bryan
|
1896
|
65.4
|
Vermont
|
Barack Obama
|
2008
|
37.0
|
Virginia
|
Andrew Jackson
|
1832
|
49.9
|
Washington
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
36.5
|
West Virginia
|
Lyndon Johnson
|
1964
|
35.9
|
Wisconsin
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
33.5
|
Wyoming
|
Franklin Roosevelt
|
1936
|
23.1
|
Table compiled by Smart Politics.
With Romney expected to run up the score in several red states on Tuesday, will the former Massachusetts governor get into the books with any records of his own?
Not likely.
The lowest all-time Republican margin of victory in a state Romney is guaranteed to carry on November 6th is Kentucky at 28.6 points in 1972, when Richard Nixon crushed George McGovern.
Even though the president is exceedingly unpopular in the deepest red states in the nation like Utah and Wyoming, Obama will likely not lose by more than the 52.2 points Jimmy Carter lost to Ronald Reagan in Utah in 1980 or the 42.3 points Reagan defeated Walter Mondale by in Wyoming in 1984.
Obama lost Utah and Wyoming by 28.0 and 32.2 points respectively in 2008 and is expected to fare worse in those western states this week.
Overall, 11 different GOP nominees hold the 50 individual state records for the largest margins of victory since the founding of the party in the mid-1850s:
· Abraham Lincoln in Kansas, Massachusetts, Missouri, and West Virginia in 1864.
· Ulysses Grant in Rhode Island and South Carolina in 1872.
· William McKinley in New Hampshire and Vermont in 1896.
· Teddy Roosevelt in Minnesota, Oregon, South Dakota, and Washington in 1904.
· Warren Harding in California, Illinois, Iowa, Montana, New Jersey, New York, North Dakota, and Wisconsin in 1920.
· Calvin Coolidge in Colorado, Connecticut, Maine, Michigan, Ohio, and Pennsylvania in 1924.
· Herbert Hoover in Delaware in 1928.
· Barry Goldwater in Mississippi in 1964.
· Richard Nixon in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Hawaii, Indiana, Kentucky, Louisiana, Maryland, New Mexico, North Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas, and Virginia in 1972. (Nixon also owns the lowest margin of loss for a Republican in D.C. at -56.5 points that cycle. The GOP has never carried the District).
· Ronald Reagan in Nevada and Utah in 1980 and Alaska, Arkansas, Idaho, Nebraska, and Wyoming in 1984.
· George H.W. Bush in Arizona in 1988.
Goldwater’s 74.3-point victory in Mississippi marked the largest all-time GOP victory across 39 cycles since 1856.
Largest Republican Presidential Nominee Margin of Victory by State, 1856-2008
State
|
GOP Nominee
|
Year
|
MoV
|
Alabama
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
46.9
|
Alaska
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1984
|
36.8
|
Arizona
|
George H.W. Bush
|
1988
|
33.9
|
Arkansas
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1984
|
38.1
|
California
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
41.9
|
Colorado
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
35.0
|
Connecticut
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
34.0
|
D.C.
|
(Richard Nixon)*
|
(1972)
|
-56.5
|
Delaware
|
Herbert Hoover
|
1928
|
30.4
|
Florida
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
44.1
|
Georgia
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
50.4
|
Hawaii
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
25.0
|
Idaho
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1984
|
46.0
|
Illinois
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
42.3
|
Indiana
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
32.8
|
Iowa
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
45.4
|
Kansas
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
1864
|
61.4
|
Kentucky
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
28.6
|
Louisiana
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
37.0
|
Maine
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
50.2
|
Maryland
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
23.9
|
Massachusetts
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
1864
|
44.5
|
Michigan
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
62.2
|
Minnesota
|
Teddy Roosevelt
|
1904
|
55.1
|
Mississippi
|
Barry Goldwater
|
1964
|
74.3
|
Missouri
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
1864
|
39.4
|
Montana
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
29.1
|
Nebraska
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1984
|
41.7
|
Nevada
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1980
|
35.6
|
New Hampshire
|
William McKinley
|
1896
|
42.8
|
New Jersey
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
39.2
|
New Mexico
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
24.5
|
New York
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
37.6
|
North Carolina
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
40.6
|
North Dakota
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
59.6
|
Ohio
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
34.6
|
Oklahoma
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
49.7
|
Oregon
|
Teddy Roosevelt
|
1904
|
47.6
|
Pennsylvania
|
Calvin Coolidge
|
1924
|
46.3
|
Rhode Island
|
Ulysses Grant
|
1872
|
43.9
|
South Carolina
|
Ulysses Grant
|
1872
|
52.0
|
South Dakota
|
Teddy Roosevelt
|
1904
|
49.4
|
Tennessee
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
38.0
|
Texas
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
33.0
|
Utah
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1980
|
52.2
|
Vermont
|
William McKinley
|
1896
|
63.4
|
Virginia
|
Richard Nixon
|
1972
|
37.7
|
Washington
|
Teddy Roosevelt
|
1904
|
50.6
|
West Virginia
|
Abraham Lincoln
|
1864
|
36.5
|
Wisconsin
|
Warren Harding
|
1920
|
54.9
|
Wyoming
|
Ronald Reagan
|
1984
|
42.3
|
* Denotes the smallest margin of loss for a Republican nominee in the District of Columbia. Table compiled by Smart Politics.
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