The news on the ground from Nebraska, which doesn't count for much, we having only 5 electoral votes:
Nebraska is generally one of the reddest states in the country, despite a vigorous Democrat party. The Democrats do pretty good here.....but NEVER on the presidential issue. There was one time not long ago the majority of the Nebraska congressional delegation to Washington was Democrat.....at the same time the first George Bush and Robert Dole racked up impressive margins in the presidential races.
The last time Nebraska voted for a Democrat for president was in 1964, Lyndon Johnson carrying the state over Barry Goldwater in a razor thin margin.
What's remarkable about the numbers in Nebraska (and this also applies to South Dakota, North Dakota, Wyoming, and Montana) is the steady drop in total votes for the Democrat candidate over the decades and generations, while the total Republican vote continues creeping, sometimes racing, upward.
This would be important, but we're not talking about a whole lot of votes here; it irks me that a corrupt inner-city ward boss in Cleveland can create more "votes" out of thin air, than all the honest votes cast in any of these states.
The Incompetent One (1977-1980) holds the top two records for "lowest votes ever received by a Democrat candidate in Nebraska," in 1976 and 1980. George McGovern, who lost Nebraska in a massive landslide in 1972, got more votes from here, than did the Impeached One in 1992 and 1996.
The primitives are prancing around alleging Barry "Goldwater" has a "good chance" to win South Dakota and North Dakota, and a "chance" to win Nebraska. But as usual the primitives don't know shit.
It's too early yet, and anything can happen. But if things continue to go on as they have, it's reasonable to expect that Barry "Goldwater" Obama will get fewer votes here than the disastrous McGovern did in 1972. I don't know if he'll get even less than the Incompetent One (1977-1981), though.
There's just something about the Incompetent One that has always driven Nebraskans to distraction.
I wish reports from other states, other places, were just as good, but while I'm not God, I suspect there's much reason for optimism.