You Decide the
Election: Interactive Electoral College
Map
The Wall Street Journal has created an
online interactive Electoral College map for the November 2016 presidential
election. The Web page displays a
cartogram with a box for each state’s electoral votes, or
users can switch to a geographic map of the states. (On the map, scroll over each state to see
how many electors are available). The
cartogram/map depicts the results from the 2012 election, where President Obama
received 332 electoral votes and Mitt Romney received 206 votes (270 electoral
votes are needed to win the election).
Users
can then click on each state to change the results from Republican to Democrat
or vice versa to forecast the results of the 2016 election. The creators of the map made switching the
results of battleground states quick and easy, but changing the results of
historically partisan states (like California and Texas) is more difficult to
switch.
The
page then details some of the historic information involving the Electoral
College and the presidential elections.
The results of the 2012 election are described in relation to the ten
states considered battleground states. A
chart showing Electoral votes by voting pattern since 2000 is provided with
bases interpreted. A review of the ten
states with the narrowest margins of victory is shown, with Florida and North
Carolina being the two closest elections.
A review of Republican-targeted “overwhelmingly white states of the
industrial Midwest” is detailed, and demographic-targeted states for the
Democrats like Georgia and Arizona are also considered. Finally a map of polling and ratings data is
provided. (Tabs at the top of the page
display each map).
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