Update

10:10 AM | 0 Comments

I'm working on editing the rancher multimedia and I'll have it done by Monday when we meet. I'm working on contacts for the Latino multimedia and will have it done no later than the 20th. I know this is later than we wanted all of our content done, but since it'll probably just be a pop-up player we can put in the image placeholder and I'll update it by the 20th. That shouldn't hold up the rest of the Web site.

Also, it sounds like we're probably just videoing the interview of the guy from Bella and probably won't have time to do a multimedia for alternative energy. So, for the final project I will probably only have the two multimedia stories since they take a lot more effort and way more time than I have to do them. But, I think that the rancher vote, or recent lack of rancher vote, and Latino vote are two pretty significant reasons for the change.

Mara

1:40 PM | 0 Comments

Denver Post election coverage that might be helpful template or just a reference for us, either for Flash map or for linking to.

BTW, I was googling "Colorado" + "independent voters" and our blog was about the sixth result!!!

Take a look at the NYT videos I sent y'all via email, and let me know what you think.

When are we meeting next? Should we plan to get together Monday afternoon and work on the Web design, or wait until next weekend, when we have content? I'm chugging along on the independent voter article, but still waiting to hear from sources/interview subjects.

JAH
So here's an interesting quote from Gallup Poll Managing Editor Jeff Jones I found regarding departing presidents' approval ratings: "It is common for presidents who are about to leave the White House to receive a bump in their job approval ratings between Election Day and Inauguration Day." Just something to keep in mind when looking at some of these numbers. CHJ

1964
Lyndon Johnson/Hubert Humphrey (DEM) - 476,024; 61.27% (elected)
Barry Goldwater/William Miller (REP) - 296,767; 38.19%

Following the assassination of President John F. Kennedy, Lyndon B. Johnson was sworn in as president on November 22, 1963.
JFK averaged an approval rating of 70.1 percent. In his first (fraction of a) term, LBJ averaged a 74.2 percent approval rating.

Critical factors leading to LBJ’s (incumbent) 1964 nomination: Kennedy's popularity continued even after his death, helping to propel Johnson; the Vietnam War conflict had not yet escalated; LBJ’s “Great Society” agenda, a set of domestic social programs; Goldwater's status as a pioneer in the modern conservative movement (LBJ worked to paint him as an extremist); LBJ’s “Daisy Girl” campaign ad that implied Goldwater, if elected, would start a nuclear war; Goldwater voted against the 1964 Civil Rights Act (to be fair, so did a significant amount of Democrats representing the South), and black voters voted “overwhelmingly” against him in 1964 (http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/politics/daily/may98/goldwater30.htm)

Other info to keep in mind:

Johnson’s victory was very lopsided, winning 61.1 percent (more than 15 million votes). This is one of the highest popular-vote percentages in American history.
(http://www.whitehouse.gov/about/presidents/LyndonJohnson/)


1948
Harry Truman/Alben Barkley (DEM) - 267,288; 51.88% (elected)
Thomas Dewey/Earl Warren (REP) - 239,714; 46.52%

Truman assumed office following the death of Franklin Roosevelt on April 12, 1945.
During his first term, Truman averaged an approval rating of 55.6 percent. However, his approval rating fell as low as 36 percent in 1948, and there was a wide expectation that Truman would lose the election (also due to a strong division within the Democratic party). Many historians dubbed his re-election as the greatest upset in American political history.

Critical factors: Truman held a strong base of Midwestern progressives; Dwight D. Eisenhower refused the nomination of either party; close race among those vying for the Republican nomination; Dewey losing votes from farmers *(see below)*; National press corps’ focus on Dewey’s “impending” victory; Truman’s verbal attacks on the 80th Republican Congress (the Dems also later recaptured Congress); Dewey’s advisers convinced him not to take any risks, leading many people to regard him as complacent; Truman embarked on an aggressive, full-fledged cross-country campaign in hopes of drawing more support; Democrats’ push for more civil rights

* This article talks about how Dewey lost a significant chunk of the rural vote in the Midwest, which has Colorado implications: “While running neck and neck with Dewey in the East, Truman was showing surprising strength in the Republican bastions in the Midwest. One farm state after another—even, of all places, Iowa—was reporting Truman pluralities.” (http://www.americanheritage.com/articles/magazine/ah/1968/4/1968_4_22.shtml)

Other info to keep in mind:

Truman was selected as FDR’s vice presidential candidate in 1944, replacing incumbent vice president Henry Wallace. Some of FDR’s key advisers did not think Wallace would be fit for president if FDR passed away. Truman reluctantly agreed. (http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/amex/presidents/video/truman_09.html#v166)

FDR was elected for four consecutive terms as president, meaning Truman’s victory marked the fifth consecutive win for the Democratic Party in a presidential election.

Truman authorized use of atomic weapons against the Japanese in August 1945, the world’s only instance of atomic warfare. Japan surrendered on August 14, 1945.
More to come... CHJ

2008
Barack Obama/Joe Biden (DEM) – 1,288,576; 53.66% (elected)
John McCain/Sarah Palin (REP) – 1,073,589; 44.71%

George W. Bush (REP) left office with…

1) a 34 percent approval rating and a 61 percent disapproval rating, according to a USA Today/Gallup poll.
(http://www.gallup.com/poll/113770/Bush-Presidency-Closes-34-Approval-61-Disapproval.aspx)

2) a 22 percent approval rating and a 73 percent disapproval rating, according to a CBS News/New York Times poll.
(http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2009/01/16/opinion/polls/main4728399.shtml)

These numbers caused many to brand him as one of the most unpopular departing presidents in history.

Critical factors: Bush’s departure; looming financial crisis; ongoing war in Iraq; Obama makes history as the first black presidential candidate for a major party

Other information to keep in mind:

Bush received the highest approval rating in history – 90 percent – in 2001 following Sept. 11.

Bush’s average approval rating: 49.4 percent


1992
Bill Clinton/Al Gore (DEM) - 629,681; 40.13% (elected)
George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle (REP) - 562,850; 35.87%

Incumbent George H. W. Bush left office with a 56 percent approval rating and a 37 percent disapproval rating, according to a Gallup Poll.

Note that his approval rating increased – from a 29 percent rating in July 1992 – leading up to the 1992 election

Critical factors: Economic recession and budget deficits; Bush’s "Read my lips: no new taxes" 1988 campaign pledge that he could not follow through on, which sparked controversy; Independent presidential candidate Ross Perot earned 19,743,821 votes (18.91%), including 366,010 from Colorado (23.32%), in the 1992 election

Other information to keep in mind:

Prior to this election, the Republican Party controlled the White House for 12 consecutive years.

George H.W. Bush’s average approval rating: 60.9 percent
So here are the numbers for FDR’s first two elections:

1936
Franklin Roosevelt/John Garner (DEM) - 295,021; 60.37% (elected)
Alfred Landon/Frank Knox (REP) - 181,267; 37.09%


1932
Franklin Roosevelt/John Garner (DEM) - 250,877; 54.81% (elected)
Herbert Hoover/Charles Curtis (REP incumbent) - 189,617; 41.43%


We spoke briefly about this during our last meeting, but I want to throw the question out there again … Should we include FDR in our numbers/timeline? I feel like he is pretty important, but if we do use those numbers I think it’s necessary that we use all four of his terms (dating back to the 1932 election). Is that too going back too far? (Keep in mind that, prior to FDR, the last time Colorado voted for a Dem was Woodrow Wilson in 1916.)

- I'm still in the process of analyzing each individual election in which Colorado voted blue in order to provide more context. I'll post that info this weekend. Untill then, here are a few more interesting notes regarding the overall numbers to tide you over:

*Every time Colorado voted for a Democrat (within the span of our timeline), that candidate was elected.

*Colorado voted for the losing candidate only five times (1996, 1976, 1960, 1944 and 1940) … that’s out of 20 elections! (Swing state implications???)

CHJ

10:37 AM | 0 Comments

I've been working on finding contacts to take photos of. Here are a couple sites I found that will be helpful for finding contacts for whoever is writing about the demographics. The Latina Initiative which is group that has been getting more Latinas engaged with politics and voting. I also found an New York Times article on the Latino vote in Colorado and New Mexico.

Also, there's the Rocky Mountain Farmers Union that I found which might be helpful in finding out more about politics of a pretty large industry throughout the state.

I contacted people at both places looking for someone to take photos of, hopefully I'll hear back in time to take photos this weekend.

Mara
Ruy Teixeira, Center for American Progress

Follow-up article on the energy bill that failed last fall.
And an article on Republican's energy ideas for this year.

I tried looking at the Independence Institute's site, but it's mostly opinion, not factual. Maybe someone else would have better luck ...

Here's one on energy and the Western vote.

Hey all, I thought I'd include some national history that we might consider when looking at Corey's research. (Great job btw).

1948: Harry Truman (Dem) elected -- technically incumbent because FDR died in office in 1945

1964: LBJ (Dem) elected -- technically incumbent because JFK was assassinated in 1963

The 2008 election was the first time in over 50 years that a democrat was elected without being an incumbent. Interesting...

FDR defeated incumbent Herbert Hoover in Colorado during the 1932 election. Don't know if we want to go back that far but that's kind of interesting.

I haven't been able to go through all the blog posts yet but this was a cool link from the Rocky. I'm sure someone else already posted it but if not, take a look!

AS

4:09 PM | 0 Comments

- Here are the remainder of the presidential election numbers. I've bolded the elections in which Colorado voted BLUE/Decomratic. I've started to compile an Exel spreadsheet just to organize things a little better. Anyone know if you can add attachments to blogs? I'll start digging for historical significance behind the BLUE votes this week. CHJ

1988
George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle (REP) - 728,177; 53.06% (elected)
Michael Dukakis/Lloyd Bentsen (DEM) - 621,453; 45.28%

1984
Ronald Reagan/George H.W. Bush (REP) - 821,818; 63.44% (elected)
Walter Mondale/Geraldine Ferraro (DEM) - 454,974; 35.12%

1980
Ronald Reagan/George H.W. Bush (REP) - 652,264; 55.07% (elected)
James Carter/Walter Mondale (DEM) - 367,973; 31.07%

1976
Gerald Ford/Robert Dole (REP) - 584,367; 54.05%
James Carter/Walter Mondale (DEM) - 460,353; 42.58% (elected)

1972
Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew (REP) - 597,189; 62.61% (elected)
George McGovern/R. Sargent Shriver (DEM) - 329,980; 34.59%

1968
Richard Nixon/Spiro Agnew (REP) - 409,345; 50.46% (elected)
Hubert Humphrey/Edmund Muskie (DEM) - 335,174; 41.32%

1964
Lyndon Johnson/Hubert Humphrey (DEM) - 476,024; 61.27% (elected)
Barry Goldwater/William Miller (REP) - 296,767; 38.19%

1960
Richard Nixon/Henry Lodge (REP) - 402,242; 54.63%
John Kennedy/Lyndon Johnson (DEM) - 330,629; 44.91% (elected)

1956
Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (REP) - 394,479; 59.49% (elected)
Adlai Stevenson/Estes Kefauver (DEM) - 263,997; 39.81%

1952
Dwight Eisenhower/Richard Nixon (REP) - 379,782; 60.27% (elected)
Adlai Stevenson/John Sparkman (DEM) - 245,504; 38.96%

1948
Harry Truman/Alben Barkley (DEM) - 267,288; 51.88% (elected)
Thomas Dewey/Earl Warren (REP) - 239,714; 46.52%


1944
Thomas Dewey/John Bricker (REP) 268,731; 53.21%
Franklin Roosevelt/Harry Truman (DEM) - 234,331; 46.40%

1940
Wendell Willkie/Charles McNary (REP) - 279,576; 50.92%
Franklin Roosevelt/ Henry Wallace (DEM) - 265,554; 48.37% (elected)

*Keep in mind that FDR served four consecutive terms!

http://uselectionatlas.org/RESULTS/
Here's an article from the Rocky (RIP) on the influence of Independents on the vote.

And some info from the Pew Research Center.

And NPR.

Also, an NPR article about Dems and Independents with regard to purple-ing of the state vote  in traditional Repub Delta county).


I met with Matt Garrington, a field director for Environment Colorado, today (not for our project) and we discussed CO politics. He noted that the red/purple/blue phenomenon is highly dependent on how independent voters poll. !! So, I suggest we add this to our focus. The problem, of course, is finding independent voters to talk with ... but I'll work on that.

I found this article in the Colorado Independent, and also this, and I'll look for other sources this weekend.

See you all on Monday, 2/2 at 3:45 in the usual spot.

Judith
Title: A Bolt of Blue: Colorado's recent presidential voting history

The Team: Mara Auster, Andrea Sutherland, Corey Jones, Allison Sandza, Judith Houlding

Purpose statement: To examine Colorado’s historical trends of voting democratic in presidential elections and to understand the significant variables that have contributed to the current shift toward its status as a blue state. After investigating the information and trends, we will also theorize how Colorado will vote in the future.

Scope and scale: Our focus is on presidential elections in Colorado since World War II. We are investigating geographic, economic, generational, and industrial variables in presidential elections in Colorado. We will also investigate the possible influence of "green" industry/conservation politics. A history of voting blue since 1940 will help provide framework and context for our project. We will also discuss what effect the 2008 Democratic National Convention had. We will not investigate the history of state politics, past Democratic governors or legislative body.

Media goals: We plan to utilize photo slideshows, audio slideshows and video footage taken in interviews as well as archival video footage of the DNC or past historical events that are relevant to our project's purpose. We would also like to create an interactive map that functions like a
timeline of voting history in presidential elections since WWII.

Who will do what: Mara is doing much of the still photography; Allison and Corey will help with video footage; the rest are print and Web implementation.

Possible Obstacles: Obtaining Census data prior to 1980 may prove difficult. As with any project, some people may object to being filmed/photo'd or recorded. More obstacles may occur in the coming weeks.
- Here are the votes I’ve compiled so far … these numbers reflect the recent shift from red to blue. I’m going to create an excel spreadsheet for all these statistics. There are a couple other Web sites that provide numbers from previous elections … but I’d like to dissect the sites first to determine which ones are best.

2008
Barack Obama/Joe Biden (DEM) – 1,288,576; 53.66% (elected)
John McCain/Sarah Palin (REP) – 1,073,589; 44.71%

2004
George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (REP) 1,101,256 (elected)
John Kerry/John Edwards (DEM) - 1,001,725
Total votes: 2,147,224

2000
George W. Bush/Dick Cheney (REP) - 883,748 (elected)
Al Gore/Joe Lieberman (DEM) - 738,227

1996
Dole/Kemp (REP) - 691,848
Clinton/Gore (DEM) - 671,152 (elected)

Source: Colorado Secretary of State Elections Center (http://www.elections.colorado.gov/DDefault.aspx?tid=398&vmid=1149)

1992
Bill Clinton/Al Gore (DEM) - 629,681; 40.13% (elected)
George H.W. Bush/Dan Quayle (REP) - 562,850; 35.87%

- Check out this CNN graph I found. It seems Colorado’s voter turnout (as a percentage of the voting age population) has consistently been above the national average:
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2004/pages/pre/CO/history.html

- Interesting article from the Rocky that adds a little bit of perspective to things:
http://m.rockymountainnews.com/news/2008/sep/27/colorado-election-history-101/

* I’ll start looking into potential expert sources this weekend/next week as well.

CHJ
For the multimedia, I want to concentrate on the personal stories throughout Colorado in the different areas that could affect the votes. I want to include the following areas if I have the time to get all of them done:

Industries (ideally mining and farming)
The Hispanic community
Rural areas
The Denver/Boulder metro area

I think these will give balance to both sides. I'm going to try to find contacts who will let me follow them around for a couple days at time. I'll get interview audio or video while they talk about their political views and why they have them and make flash audio/video slideshows which I will probably try to divide up for each individual story. We could also mix in audio or video of the interviews of the official people, so let me know if you need a good recorder and you can borrow mine. Even if you have a cheap recorder, if you don't have a good mic the audio probably won't be good enough to use so let me know and you can use mine. Also, if any of you want to shoot photos or video that's fine by me and we can share the multimedia.

A site I found that is going to be helpful for all of us is http://projects.rockymountainnews.com/apps/news/politics/elections/colorado-county-profiles/ which has the demographics, including industry, and past presidential election results of each county. Pueblo County, with a large Hispanic population, has voted blue pretty consistently. Gunnison and Garfield Counties with mining as one of their larger industries have voted mostly red in the past 50 years.

If you guys find any good contacts that you think I should have in the multimedia, let me know please! Otherwise, I will find them on my own and give you guys their number if you want to use them in the articles.

Let me know if you guys want me to change anything about what I have planned so far. Hopefully, I'll start shooting within the next two weeks.

Mara
hi gang, i called over to boulder county democrats today and spoke with Susan, the office manager there. i am going to go interview her a week from today (next thursday) at 10 am at their office on walnut. she said it was fine if i brought a video camera so if we wanted to do that we could.

i am going to speak with her thursday about who else she knows for an interview as well and i figured we could kind of hop along like that.

have a great weekend!

ABS
Here's a list of our individual concentrations. Please add any edits or clarifications you see fit as we continue to develop our ideas and methods. I say we each write individual posts that go a little deeper as we start to refine our own responsibilities and goals.

CHJ

Corey - incidents of voting democratic since 1940 and historical factors
- expectations for future

Andrea – demographics

Mara – multimedia/audio slideshow: faces/personal stories from different areas (or industries) of the state

Allie – impact of the convention

Judith – generational aspects (and possibly conservation related stuff: green movement)
I found some links to Democratic organizations in Denver.

The DNC site, colorado branch:
http://www.democrats.org/a/local/west/colorado/

Coloradodems.org Blog:
http://blog.coloradodems.org

(The DNC site redirects you to coloradodems.org, but it doesn't seem like they have anything going on right now, there's not text anywhere (including the press link) except for that blog)

The convention website:
http://www.demconvention.com/

Boulder County Democrats:
http://bouldercountydems.org/

I'm going to call the coloradodems.org number tomorrow to see if there's a time next week we can meet for a pre-interview or actual interview. I'm a little disorganized right now, I know, but here's what I've found so far. In a bipartisan effort, should I contact the GOP of Colorado for their response to the convention as well?

ABS
Our journalistic purpose is as follows: To examine Colorado’s historical trends of voting democratic in presidential elections and to understand the significant variables that have contributed to the current shift toward its status as a blue state. After investigating the information and trends, we will also theorize how Colorado will vote in the future.
From Judith: I'm looking at generational differences in Colorado voting, primarily how the boomers voted, and what is their effect, if any, on Colorado's "blue" status.

I found this article in The Atlantic, Dec. 2007, that talks about boomer politics on the national scene:
http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200712/obama

And this blog on Colorado Confidential may point me to some good sources:
http://www.coloradoconfidential.com/showDiary.do?diaryId=1710

And this site:
http://www.coloradoboomers.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=16&Itemid=21

Some demographic info:
http://www.colorado.edu/libraries/govpubs/popindex.htm
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0126/p15s02-lihc.html

Contradictory info:
http://www.examiner.com/x-654-Baby-Boomer-Examiner~y2008m9d26-Older-voters-in-battleground-states-favor-Obama
National Census Data:

2000 Census

1990 Census

1980 Census
(click on Colorado - Ch. AB)

1950-1970 Data

State Census Data:

1950-2000 Census

1990 Voter Age Range
have to set age ranges

2000 Voter Age Range
have to set age ranges

Race (in excel/pdf files)


I gotta run to work but I'll post more tomorrow :) ~ AS

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