"The 2020 general election could be contested on the narrowest electoral terrain in recent memory."

"Just four states are likely to determine the outcome in 2020. Each flipped to the Republicans in 2016, but President Trump won each by only a percentage point or less. The four are Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin and Florida. Many analysts point to Wisconsin as the single state upon which the election could turn." ...

“'Because of the partisanship of the country and the partisanship of the president, we are now looking at the smallest map in modern political history,' said Jim Messina, who was the campaign manager for former president Barack Obama’s 2012 reelection campaign." ...

"In 2016, Trump lost the popular vote to Clinton by roughly three million people but won 304 electoral votes and the presidency. Based on current polling, his chances of winning the popular vote are at least as challenging as in 2016, leaving open the question of whether he can again produce an electoral college majority." ...

"In past campaigns, when there were a dozen or more truly competitive battlegrounds, presidential nominees could chart multiple paths to 270 electoral votes and worked to keep as many of those options alive as long as possible." Read the whole Washington Post article 
WHY SO FEW STATES MATTER IN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

The reason why only 4, 8, or 12 states matter in presidential elections is that most states have enacted so-called "winner-take-all" laws.

These laws award 100% of a state's electoral votes to the candidate receiving the most popular votes in each state. Thus, presidential candidates have no reason to campaign in, or pay attention to, voters in states where they are safely ahead or hopelessly behind. 

In 2012, 100% of the general-election campaign events (and virtually all campaign expenditures) were concentrated in the 12 closely divided "battleground" states where Romney's support was 45%-51%. Because of state winner-take-all laws, neither Romney nor Obama had any realistic chance of winning electoral votes outside those 12 states. Thus, 38 states were totally ignored, including almost all small states, medium-sized states, rural states, western states, southern states, and northeastern states. Two-thirds of the general-election campaign events (176 of 253) were concentrated in just 4 states (OH, FL, VA, IA). 

Similarly, in 2016, almost all (94%) general-election campaign events were in the 12 battleground states where Trump's support was in the narrow range of 43%-51%. Two-thirds of the campaign events (273 of 399) were in just 6 states (OH, FL, VA, NC, PA, MI). 

As Dan Balz's article explains, almost all of the 2020 presidential campaign will be concentrated in Pennsylvania, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Florida. In the next 14 months, the candidates will test the waters in a few other states (such as Arizona, North Carolina, and New Hampshire) to see if they are worth campaigning in. Meanwhile, some states that received attention in the past (such as Virginia and Colorado) are already considered unlikely to be part of the 2020 campaign. Of course, predictions made 14 months beforehand can change. Michigan and Pennsylvania were virtually ignored in 2012, but got a lot of attention in 2016.
STATEWIDE VOTE IN COLORADO

Recognizing that National Popular Vote is close to adoption, our opposition has filed a petition to force a statewide vote on the National Popular Vote law passed by the Colorado legislature and signed by Governor Polis in 2019.
ADDITIONAL INFORMATION

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