Will it be 2000 all over again? Will Mitt Romney take home the popular vote in November but lose the Electoral College?
In considering the latest round of polls, the Morning Joe panel on Friday posited the possibility all the while seemingly echoing Nate Silver’s latest findings that “…Barack Obama’s chances of winning the Electoral College increasing incrementally to 65.7 percent from 64.8 percent.”
A Real Clear Politics average of polls currently has the president at 47% to Romney’s 47.1%. The president still leads Romney in seven battleground states, according to the Real Clear Politics average.
Thursday’s Gallup Daily tracking poll, which the group discussed this morning, has Mitt Romney at 52% to the president’s 45%, while a new NBC News/WSJ/Marist poll has the president leading with likely voters in Iowa with 51% to 43%. The same poll also has President Obama leading Romney 51% to 45% in Wisconsin. Adding to this is a new Marquette University poll has the president at 49% in Wisconsin to Romney’s 48%.
Weary of these numbers, host Joe Scarborough said: “I know Gallup usually does skew Republican, I take that into account…but here it’s so jumbled, I don’t know if there’s a ghost in the machine…this year it’s a lot more erratic in polling than it’s been ever.”
One possible outcome of the 2012 presidential election is Romney winning the popular vote and President Obama winning the Electoral College, suggested Ed Rendell, the former Democratic governor of Pennsylvania.








