J. Miles Coleman Profile picture
Jul 1, 2018 8 tweets 5 min read Twitter logo Read on Twitter
As Orange County, CA finished counting its primary ballots last week, we're going to be looking the House race in #CA45. This Congressional District is entirely in Orange County; it starts north in Anaheim, takes Irvine in the middle, and ends near Mission Viejo.
In 2016, Rep. Mimi Walters (R) won her second term by 17%. The district, which went to Romney in 2012, flipped to Clinton by almost 6%. Walters actually won more Clinton precincts than her Dem opponent, Ron Varasteh, did. #ca45
#CA45, like Orange County in general, has traditionally voted Republican. In fact, Clinton was the only recent statewide Democrat to carry it; even Obama and Feinstein lost it by double-digits. Still, the trend meant that Dems consider this seat a good pickup opportunity.
In last month's #CA45 primary, Rep. Walters (red) took an outright majority, with about 52%. She was the only Republican in a 6-way field, and carried 424 of 448 precincts. For second place, Katie Porter (blue), edged out Dave Min (green) by about 4K votes.
Combing the votes, things look better for Democrats. Their candidates took 46% of the votes. Walters won most Irvine & Tustin precincts with pluralities; in this map, both are pretty blue. Overall, this was obviously worse than HRC's result, but better than other past Dems. #CA45
Walters placed second in very few precincts (as she carried most of them). Katie Porter (blue) finished second over 3/4 of precincts (341 of 448). Dave Min's (green) strength was mostly concentrated in Irvine, with some in Laguna Hills & Mission Viejo. #CA45
Finally, here's Porter (blue) vs Min (green). Porter got 34K votes to Min's 30K. Min did well in Irvine, but Porter just had broader strength. Cities in the north (Anaheim, Orange, Tustin) that went heavily to Walters overall also gave Porter comfortable margins here. #ca45
ah, should be "Combining the votes", but I guess I was combing over some data to get this map.

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More from @JMilesColeman

Apr 13, 2018
Ok guys, tonight we'll be doing a thread on last week's Wisconsin Supreme Court race. Democratic-aligned Rebecca Dallet beat GOP-supported Michael Screnock by almost 12%.
#SCOWIS #wopolitics #ElectionTwitter
Compared to Clinton, who narrowly lost, Dallet had a lot of upside. She performed better in 69 of 72 counties. Further, looking at partisan loyalty, nearly 2/3 of her municipalities (496 of 757) voted for Trump. She flipped 24 counties. Only 2 HRC towns went to Screnock.
In the 2016 #WISen race, Sen. Ron Johnson (R) won a rematch w/ex-Sen. Russ Feingold (D). Feingold ran under HRC overall, but better in rural areas. As a result, there were fewer Johnson municipalities for Dallet to flip. She still flipped 432, as well as 18 counties.
Read 11 tweets
Jan 15, 2018
Tonight on #ElectionTwitter, since NC may re-re-redistrict it's Cong. districts, we're gonna be looking back at the Congressional map that was in place from 2002 to 2010. #ncpol #ncga
Why this map? 1) It was drawn by Dems, and represents something of a best-case for them and 2) I've always liked this map, and usually end up breaking statewide races down under its lines, anyway. #ncpol #ncga
The 2001 Congressional map held up pretty well for Democrats. For example, they went into the red wave of 2010 holding 8 of 13 seats. They lost the House popular vote by 9% in NC, but of their seats, only #NC02 flipped R, and only barely. #ncpol
Read 6 tweets
Jan 7, 2018
Well guys, tonight on #ElectionTwitter, we're gonna be looking at Orange County. It's California's third most populous county and will be critical for the 2018 midterms.
Why is Orange County so interesting? Well, to start, it was one the relatively few Romney -> Clinton counties. She won it by almost 9%, becoming the first Democrat to carry it since FDR in 1936.
Despite the county flipping to Clinton, a quartet of districts there (or at least partially contained within OC) reelected R incumbents to Congress: #CA39, #CA45, #CA48, and #CA49.
Read 19 tweets

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