Republicans have a massive electoral map problem that has nothing to do with Donald Trump- Chris Cillizza
Politico
reported today on a Florida poll conducted for a business group
in the state that shows Hillary Clinton beating Donald Trump by 13 points and
Ted Cruz by nine.
Why is that important? Because if Clinton wins Florida and carries the
19 states (plus D.C.) that have voted for the Democratic presidential nominee
in each of the last six elections, she will be the 45th
president. It's that simple.

And here's the underlying math. If Clinton wins the 19 states (and D.C.)
that every Democratic nominee has won from 1992 to 2012, she has 242 electoral
votes. Add Florida's 29 and you get 271. Game over.
The Republican map — whether with Trump, Cruz or the ideal Republican
nominee (Paul Ryan?) as the standard-bearer — is decidedly less friendly. There
are 13 states that have gone for the GOP presidential nominee in each of the
last six elections. But they only total 102 electorate votes. That means the eventual
nominee has to find, at least, 168 more electoral votes to get to 270. Which is
a hell of a lot harder than finding 28 electoral votes.
Many Republicans — particularly in Washington — are already preparing to
blame a loss this fall, which many of them view as inevitable, on the
divisiveness of Trump. That's not entirely fair to Trump though.
While his dismal numbers among women and Hispanics, to name two groups,
don't help matters and could — in a worst-case scenario — put states like
Arizona and even Utah in play for Democrats, the map problems that face the GOP
have very, very little to do with Trump or even Cruz.
Instead they are, largely, demographic problems centered on the GOP's
inability to win any large swath of non-white voters. New Mexico, a state in
which almost half the population is Latino, is the ur-example here. In 2004,
George W. Bush won the Land of Enchantment in his bid for a second term. (His
margin over John Kerry was 588 votes.) Eight years later, Barack Obama won the
state by 10 points over Mitt Romney; neither side targeted it in any meaningful
way.
What has become increasingly clear is that any state with a large or
growing non-white population has become more and more difficult for Republicans
to win. Virginia and North Carolina, long Republican strongholds, have moved
closer and closer to Democrats of late. (Obama won both states in 2008 and carried
Virginia in 2012.)
At the same time as these states have grown friendlier to Democrats,
there are very few states that are growing increasingly Republican. Wisconsin
and Minnesota are two but neither is moving rapidly in Republicans' favor just
yet.
What you are left with then is an electoral map in which the Democratic
nominee begins at a significant advantage over the Republican one. (It is the
obverse of the massive Republican electoral college edge of the 1980s.) And
that edge is totally distinct from any individual candidate and his/her
strengths or weaknesses. Yes, Trump as the nominee is more problematic than
Ryan as the nominee, but the idea that Ryan would start the general election
with a coin-flip chance of being elected president is just wrong.
The Republican map problem goes deeper than Trump — or any one
candidate. Blaming Trump for a loss this November not only misses the point but
could ensure that Republicans are doomed to repeat history in 2020.
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