Political Trends where you disagree with the Atlas Consensus (user search)
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  Political Trends where you disagree with the Atlas Consensus (search mode)
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Author Topic: Political Trends where you disagree with the Atlas Consensus  (Read 10530 times)
jamestroll
jamespol
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Posts: 10,548


« on: October 03, 2017, 03:18:45 AM »

May not necessarily be a huge disagreement but I often wonder the rationale for Atlas by and large saying Illinois will be a SOLID Republican state in the future.
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jamestroll
jamespol
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Posts: 10,548


« Reply #1 on: October 12, 2017, 12:44:16 PM »

Can someone explain to me why this site largely believes Illinois will trend heavily Republican?
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jamestroll
jamespol
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Posts: 10,548


« Reply #2 on: January 09, 2018, 08:59:17 PM »

everyone knows my answer here.

I disagree with the large consensus on this site that Illinois will become a solid gop state in the future.

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jamestroll
jamespol
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Posts: 10,548


« Reply #3 on: January 18, 2018, 09:27:51 PM »

Also Atlas tends to think that New Hampshire will become a solid Republican state. That is completely false. In a decade or two it will regularly break 60% Democratic and will be the most Democratic state in New England.

Yes when most of people on this site are out of diapers New Hampshire will be more Democratic compared to Massachusetts and Vermont.
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jamestroll
jamespol
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Posts: 10,548


« Reply #4 on: March 07, 2018, 05:56:09 PM »


Also, Jimmie, no one thinks NH or IL will be "solid GOP" states ... you just want to keep talking about it.

No sir... why are you bringing this up weeks later?

I think IL will be rock solid Democratic for presidential voting but fairly competitive for state elections.

I agree with MT Treasurer and Heisenberg on New Hampshire.
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