The Crystal Ball Forecasting Elections in the United States.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cases in Congressional Campaigns: Incumbents Playing Defense Playing Defense in a Year of Change Macrolevel Political Dynamics in 2008.
Advertisements

VOTING AND ELECTIONS Chapter 13 O’Connor and Sabato
The Crystal Ball Forecasting Elections in the United States.
When you vote for the President you are actually voting for an ELECTOR to vote for you Each state has a determined number of electors.
Chapter 10 section 2 ELECTION CAMPAIGNS.
Understanding the The Road to the Presidency
Election Forecasting Travis N. Ridout Washington State University.
Strategic Politicians. Number of House seats held by President’s party,
Strategic Politicians. Number of House seats held by President’s party,
Parties II: American political parties. Are American political parties strong or weak? Depends on how you look at party PIG PIE PAO Parties in government.
Congressional Elections Unit 4: Institutions & Unit 2: Pol. Beliefs, Behaviors.
THE ECONOMY AND THE VOTERS: 2010 Kathleen A. Frankovic Hawaii Economic Association August 26, 2010.
Surge and Decline The Election of Clearly Stated Learning Objectives Understand the decision making process for why people vote as they do and how.
VOTING AND ELECTIONS. Voting and Elections n Campaigns and Elections –primaries –general elections n Campaign financing n public opinion polling n Voting.
AMERICA = YOU PARLIAMENTARY = PARTY PAGE 231 Presidential –More people vote –Candidate must work harder and spend more –More competitive –Winner gets.
8 Campaigns and Elections Democracy in Action.
Midterm Elections POLS 125: Political Parties & Elections.
The Electoral College.
 Article II Section I established the Electoral College  Each state choose electors according to a method the state legislatures set up and each state.
The Election Process Pathway to the Presidency Nomination (primary season) and election (general election); two separate steps, two strategies.
Forecasting Elections POL Forecasting Models Aim to accurately predict the results of an election, before the election is held, identifying.
 Primary Elections: › Election in which voters decide which of the candidates within a party will represent the party in the general election.  Closed.
Chapter 10.2 Election Campaigns.
VOTING AND ELECTIONS Chapter 12 O’Connor and Sabato
Presidential and Congressional Elections November 12, 2007.
PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS Mr. Lawrence American Gov’t.
Running for Congress CJ Cayanan, Meagan Crisostomo, Gina Nakagawa, Brian Yoo.
Using the 2010 Midterm Elections to Teach Across the Curriculum Presenter Gary Copeland University of Oklahoma Presenter Gary Copeland University of Oklahoma.
Congress and Why the Democrats Win The Incumbency advantage The Fundraising Advantage The Retirement Advantage The Partisan Advantage.
How are Presidents Elected? Unit 10 Part 2. Electoral College – Today – New Way The electoral college elects the president – NOT THE DIRECT or “POPULAR”
The Power of Civic Engagement Voting/ civic participation.
From Change to Change: Obama and the Tea Party in 2010 Presented by Terry Nelson November 30, 2010 International Democrat Union.
Representation 17 November The Tracking Polls as of November 3 Obama 51, McCain 44 (DemCorps 10/30=11/2) Obama 51, McCain 43 (NBCWSJ 11/1-2) Obama.
ELECTORAL COLLEGE Electing the President of the United States.
SOL 5f The Electoral College. Presidential Elections  When voters go to the polls on election day in November to vote for a presidential candidate, they.
1 Political Update: The National Elections of 2010 David F. Damore University of Nevada, Las Vegas Department of Political Science Prepared for 2010 ALA.
* What are 2 qualifications you have to meet in order to vote in the U.S.? * Which right is considered by many outside of this country to be our greatest.
Forms of Political Participation Lobbying is the strategy by which organized interests seek to influence the passage of legislation by exerting direct.
Voter Turnout & Factors Affecting Voter Behavior.
The Electoral College GOAL: Evaluate the Electoral College system.
Daniel Palazzolo Professor of Political Science University of Richmond “Presidential Politics and the US Economy” VRMCA Fall Conference October 3, 2016.
Forms of Political Participation
Electoral College Process of how we elect our Presidents
Elections in the United States
How do voters make up their minds?
United states government
ELECTORAL COLLEGE.
Elections and Voting.
United States Government
VOTING AND ELECTIONS Chapter 13 O’Connor and Sabato
VOTING AND ELECTIONS Chapter 13 O’Connor and Sabato
The Last Battle: The Electoral College
The Functions of Elections
Electoral College.
Electing the President
Two Types of Elections Direct Election- -winners are chosen based on popular vote (citizens’ choice) Ex.- -referendums, Congressional Elections, city and.
The Electoral College Present.
Congressional Elections
Voting, Elections, Campaigns and Media
Chapter 9, 10- Campaigns and Elections
Elections in Congress Congress.
PRESIDENTIAL and CONGRESSIONAL ELECTIONS
VOTING AND ELECTIONS Chapter 12 O’Connor and Sabato
Campaigns and Elections
How is the President Elected?
Electing the President
Elections and Running for
ELECTORAL COLLEGE.
The Electoral College.
Congressional Elections
Presentation transcript:

The Crystal Ball Forecasting Elections in the United States

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

C. The weighted coin flip model 1. Best guess for Presidential elections years in advance

2. Performance: Better than flipping a coin…

D. Congress: Bet on the incumbents

II. Short-term forecasts A. Opinion polls: How well do they predict elections? 1. Continuous polling = recent development

2. How did tracking polls perform?

1992

Generic Congressional Ballot

B. The Wisdom of Crowds 1. How often is the public right? (early Oct)

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)

Market predictions for 2006:

IV. Presidential Elections

Accounting for Fatigue…

Performance: 1992 and 1996

Performance: 2000

2000: Were the polls any better?

Labor Day Polls: Good predictors of winner, poor predictors of vote share

The economy: Also a good predictor of winner

Comparing Political Science Models

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

1. House seats: approval, growth, and timing

House seat model performance

2. Senate Seats: Exposure, Referendum, and Partisan Advantage

D. Midterm polls can be misleading 1. General format = “Generic ballot” 2. Generic ballot overestimates Democrats’ chances

3. Using the generic ballot to predict House seats

VI. Do Campaigns Matter? Yes…but we still don’t know exactly how