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Published byAndra Moody Modified over 9 years ago
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The Crystal Ball Forecasting Elections in the United States
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I. Long-Term Forecasts: Can we do better than flipping a coin? A. Elections have patterns: Winning streaks B. Streaks tend to be 2-4 elections long
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C. The weighted coin flip model 1. Best guess for Presidential elections years in advance
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2. Performance: Better than flipping a coin…
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D. Congress: Bet on the incumbents
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II. Short-term forecasts A. Opinion polls: How well do they predict elections? 1. Continuous polling = recent development
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2. How did tracking polls perform?
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1992
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Generic Congressional Ballot
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B. The Wisdom of Crowds 1. How often is the public right? (early Oct)
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2. Electoral Stock Markets You can “buy” stock in a candidate (real money futures contracts) Theory: people who invest money have a huge stake in the outcome, so have incentives to weigh information carefully (invisible hand)
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Market predictions for 2006:
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IV. Presidential Elections
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Accounting for Fatigue…
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Performance: 1992 and 1996
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Performance: 2000
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2000: Were the polls any better?
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Labor Day Polls: Good predictors of winner, poor predictors of vote share
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The economy: Also a good predictor of winner
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Comparing Political Science Models
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V. Congressional Elections A. Timing: President’s party tends to lose seats in midterms (worse for Democrats) B. Exposure: How many seats are exposed? 1. House: Party has higher % of seats than historical average 2. Senate: Number of each party’s seats up for grabs C. The referendum model: Presidential approval helps/harms incumbent party
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1. House seats: approval, growth, and timing
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House seat model performance
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2. Senate Seats: Exposure, Referendum, and Partisan Advantage
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D. Midterm polls can be misleading 1. General format = “Generic ballot” 2. Generic ballot overestimates Democrats’ chances
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3. Using the generic ballot to predict House seats
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VI. Do Campaigns Matter? Yes…but we still don’t know exactly how
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