Full 1960-2012 election coverage on this link if you rather watch that election

<< < (5/6) > >>

Balsanator03:
Imagine Robert F. Kennedy (D) v. Richard M. Nixon (R) v. George Wallace (AI)... The Democrats would have had control over the White House for over a decade. 1976 would be a major Red Wave.

Proud Houstonian:
If its 1920 why is there 435 house members when it should be less

MATTROSE94:
Don't know if they are included in the link, but here are some kinescope recordings of the TV coverage from 1948 DNC (WPIX), the 1948 Presidential election (NBC), and the 1956 Presidential election (CBS). There was earlier TV coverage of the 1940 and 1944 Presidential elections, as well as the 1946 midterm election, the 1945 New York Mayoral elections, and possibly a small amount of coverage by CBS of the 1942 midterm elections on their weekly news summary program, but methods to record TV broadcasts were not introduced until 1947, so no recordings of those broadcasts exist.

https://youtu.be/tas3kJkFKiE

https://youtu.be/WsHwnGoZHy0

https://youtu.be/J7wdcYh7oIg

Enduro:
Well, that's pretty cool.

Mr. Smith:
Quote from: Mr. Smith on June 27, 2017, 09:23:12 PM

These are the tipping point states that broke it one way or another as the TV calls it, not necessarily the closest one percentage wise.

1960: PENDING
1968: Missouri
1972: Ohio
1976: Wisconsin
1980: South Carolina
1988: Nevada
1992: Wisconsin
1996: New Mexico
2000: Florida
2004: Ohio
2008: California
2012: Ohio
2016: Pennsylvania

Interesting how only 2000, and 1988 managed to escape The Midwest. Although in the case of '08, Iowa was called first and California's insta-call just filled in the rest. 1996 was done in by a bunch of Midwest returns and New Mexico giving the final 5 EV.





2020: Pennsylvania

Gee, this is weird.

Navigation

[0] Message Index

[#] Next page

[*] Previous page