![]() Personaly I feel my white version obscures the identity of the winner in close races as effectively, while allowing the geographical patterns (blue near the sea and the rivers, red in the mountains and the plains) to show up more starkly. So he was making a colour choice to deliberately obscure one story, "here's who won", in favour of another story, "a narrowly red county is hardly any different from a narrowly blue one". ![]() I'd rather not introduce artificial devices to facilitate making such distinctions. I think such a plot distorts the essential point which is that a 55/45 community is almost the same as a 45/55 community. In response to emails requesting a version of the map like the one I made, Vanderbei agreed that it would present more information, but obscure the point he wanted to make when he chose the purple: Mariannette Miller-Meeks, Republican, wins Iowa’s. So, using Paint Shop Pro, I changed the palette for one more to my liking: Claudia Tenney, Republican, wins New York’s 22nd Congressional District. but, I fear, at the cost of information some of us might be glad to have. His map, called Purple America, was apparently dedicated to debunking the maps that showed whole states as uniformly "red" or "blue" when close to half the actual voters voted for the minority candidate. ![]() Davis, Kennedy Elliott, Amy Hughes, Ben Koski, Allison McCartney and Karen Workman.I had the same feeling as Jeff Mather when I saw the 2005 results mapped by county by Princeton University's Robert J. David Goodman, Blake Hounshell, Shawn Hubler, Annie Karni, Maya King, Stephanie Lai, Lisa Lerer, Jonathan Martin, Patricia Mazzei, Alyce McFadden, Jennifer Medina, Azi Paybarah, Mitch Smith, Tracey Tully, Jazmine Ulloa, Neil Vigdor and Jonathan Weisman production by Andy Chen, Amanda Cordero, Alex Garces, Chris Kahley, Laura Kaltman, Andrew Rodriguez and Jessica White editing by Wilson Andrews, Kenan Davis, William P. Epstein, Nicholas Fandos, Lalena Fisher, Trip Gabriel, Katie Glueck, J. Bender, Sarah Borell, Sarah Cahalan, Emily Cochrane, Nick Corasaniti, Jill Cowan, Catie Edmondson, Reid J. Reporting by Grace Ashford, Maggie Astor, Michael C. Lee, Vivian Li, Rebecca Lieberman, Ilana Marcus, Alicia Parlapiano, Jaymin Patel, Marcus Payadue, Matt Ruby, Rachel Shorey, Charlie Smart, Umi Syam, Jaime Tanner, James Thomas, Urvashi Uberoy, Ege Uz, Isaac White and Christine Zhang. The Times’s election results pages are produced by Michael Andre, Aliza Aufrichtig, Kristen Bayrakdarian, Neil Berg, Matthew Bloch, Véronique Brossier, Irineo Cabreros, Sean Catangui, Andrew Chavez, Nate Cohn, Lindsey Rogers Cook, Alastair Coote, Annie Daniel, Saurabh Datar, Avery Dews, Asmaa Elkeurti, Tiffany Fehr, Andrew Fischer, Lazaro Gamio, Martín González Gómez, Will Houp, Jon Huang, Samuel Jacoby, Jason Kao, Josh Katz, Aaron Krolik, Jasmine C. 2020 comparison maps exclude places where third-party candidates won more than 5 percent of the vote. The Associated Press also provides estimates for the share of votes reported, which are shown for races for which The Times does not publish its own estimates. ![]() ![]() These are only estimates, and they may not be informed by reports from election officials. The Times estimates the share of votes reported and the number of remaining votes, based on historic turnout data and reporting from results providers. Source: Election results and race calls are from The Associated Press. New Hampshire has a republican trifecta N.H. Minnesota has a democratic trifecta Minn. Massachusetts has a democratic trifecta Mass. ![]()
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