Electoral Vote Predictor
Date PostedArticle
9 hours ago Tue, Sep. 07 Electoral Vote Predictor

Senate and House Tracking Starts Today     Permalink

The primary season is almost over. On Sept. 14 we have Delaware, Maryland, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New York, Rhode Island, and Wisconsin. Then Four days later we have Hawaii and we are pretty much done with the primaries. Still, even with the candidates unknown in a few key races (Delaware and New Hampshire Senate races, for example), the big picture is pretty much clear now. Consequently, we are starting to track the House and Senate races on a daily basis, as in previous years.

The map above reflects the current state of all the Senate races except NYA, in which Chuck Schumer (D-NY) is going to coast to an easy victory, so the map will just show NYB (Kirsten Gillibrand vs. the winner of the GOP primary in New York). The algorithm used is the same as in 2008, which got 33 of the 35 Senate races right. The two it missed were Minnesota (Franken vs. Coleman), which ultimately was decided by the courts after 6 months of wrangling, and Georgia (Chambliss vs. Martin), which required a runoff. The algorithm is explained on the page linked to the "Map algorithm explained" link below the legend to the lower right of the map. Basically, the most recent poll is always used and if there are other polls within a week of it, all of the are averaged equally. The algorithm also did pretty good with the presidental vote, predicting all states correctly except Indiana (which Obama won by 1%) and Missouri, which McCain won by 0.1% The projected electoral vote was 353 to 174 (with Missouri projected as a tie). The actual electoral vote was 365 to 173.

The map is active, as in the past. If you put the mouse cursor on a state, you get a pop-up box telling what the score is there. Clicking on a state brings up a graph of all the polls for that Senate race for all of 2

12 hours ago Wed, Jul. 21 Electoral Vote Predictor
Note: Due to travel and lack of news, postings will continue to be sporadic until September when things should pick up.

Barnes Wins Georgia Gubernatorial Nomination; Runoff for the GOP     Permalink

In yesterday's primary election in Georgia, former governor Roy Barnes (D) easily bested half a dozen opponents to get the Democrat nomination to run for the open governor's seat. On the Republican side, the result was indecisive, with tea party favorite, Karen Handel, and former congressman Nathan Deal coming in first and second, respectively. Neither of them got 50% of the vote in a multiway primary so they will face off in a runoff in three weeks. The winner will take on Barnes in November. This race is important because Georgia is a large and growing state and both houses of the state legislature are dominated by Republicans. If Handel or Deal win in November, the legislature will be free to gerrymander congressional districts to its heart's content (something it already has a history of doing). If Barnes wins, he will veto any such plans and the new districts will have to be drawn in a way that favors neither party.

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Sep 3, 2010 Mon, Aug. 02 Electoral Vote Predictor

Update on Top Senate Races     Permalink

Updates will be a bit sporadic until September due to travel and the fact that most people aren't really tuned into politics yet, which makes the polls very suspect this far out. Here is a rundown of the top Senate races. For a rundown on all the Senate races, click on the "Senate Races" link under the map.

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Sep 1, 2010 Wed, Sep. 01 Electoral Vote Predictor

Regular Updates to Start Next Week     Permalink

Labor Day is the traditional kickoff for political campaigns in the U.S. so we will begin our detailed coverage of the 2010 midterm elections next week. Before September, most voters are more interested in hot dogs than hot air and don't pay a lot of attention to politicians. That will start to change next week. Accordingly, the site will be updated (almost) every day from next week to election day.

Party in the White House Nearly Always Loses Seats in the Midterms     Permalink

With very few exceptions in the past half century, the party occupying the White House loses seats in both the Senate and House during the midterm elections. The President's opponents see the midterms as away to register their unhappiness with him. But usually enough of his supporters are more disappointed by what he didn't do than by what he do and stay home, which makes a difference. Here is a chart showing the results of all the Senate midterms since WWII. Bars going down from the horizontal black line mean the President's party lost seats in the Senate. Bars going up showed that it won. Only three times in more than a half century has the President's party gained ground, and then only one or two seats. The colors indicate which party was in the White House at the time of the midterms. The average loss in the Senate is 7 seats.

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Aug 28, 2010 Thu, Aug. 12 Electoral Vote Predictor

Review of the Gubernatorial Rces     Permalink

While there are still primaries to come in half a dozen potentially competitive states, it is nevertheless worthwhile to take a look at the gubernatorial races that are already beginning to become clear. There are an incredible 24 open governor's seats this November, mostly due to term limits, but also a few due to voluntary retirements and one (NV) due to the sitting governor being defeated in a primary. Here is the list

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Aug 25, 2010 Wed, Aug. 25 Electoral Vote Predictor

Scott Wins Florida GOP Gubernatorial Nomination     Permalink

Billionaire tea partier Rick Scott (R) rocked the Republican establishment by defeating Florida Attorney General Bill McCollum (R) for the Florida gubernatorial nomination by a margin of 46% to 43%, with retired Army officer Mike McCalister getting the rest. This race has implications far beyond the Florida governor's mansion, but first the basics. Scott won the nomination by spending $40 million of his own vast fortune buying TV ads trashing McCollum as just another politician. Convincing Florida Republicans, who tend to be very conservative, to pick a tea partier over an establishment politician has proven quite easy this year (see Kentucky, Colorado, and Nevada) but will be a much harder sell in the general election. For one thing, he campaigned by supporting Arizona's controversial law that orders the police to stop anyone they think might be illegal. How is that going to fly with the state's huge Latino population? Many of them are Republicans (especially the Cuban-Americans) but in the primary they had McCollum and McCalister to vote for if they didn't want to vote for Scott. In the general election, it will be just Scott vs. the state's Chief Financial Officer (think: State Treasurer) Alex Sink (D).

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Aug 24, 2010 Tue, Aug. 24 Electoral Vote Predictor

Primaries in Florida Today     Permalink

There are a number of primaries today. Let's start with Florida as there are two very hotly contested ones there. The Democratic one features Rep. Kendrick Meek (D-FL), a black congressman who was willing to offer himself up as a sacrificial lamb at a time when everyone assumed Gov. Charlie Crist (R/I-FL) was going to win the Republican senatorial primary and then the Senate seat opening up as a result of the retirement of Sen. George LeMieux (R-FL), who was appointed by Crist. When the polling got bad, Crist dropped out of the Republican primary and is running as an independent where he thought he would face former Florida house speaker Marco Rubio (R) and Meek. However, a sleazy billionaire, Jeff Greene, unexpectedly jumped into the Democratic primary and figured by spending $20 million or more of his own money on TV ads, he could buy the nomination. Initially it looked like that might work, and for a clean billionaire it might have. It worked for Meg Whitman in the California governor's race, for example. But Greene is no ordinary billionaire. He made his money by shorting mortgages--essentially hoping people would default on their mortgages and lose their homes. He also has a yacht only slightly smaller than the QE2 on which he holds parties featuring paid female "entertainers" who, well, entertain Greene's gentlemen guests, including the likes of Mike Tyson. As this stuff leaked out, Greene began to nosedive in the polls and Meek may well yet pull it off. If the nomination if worth anything remains to be seen. In reality, Meek's only hope is that some huge scandal causes Crist to crash and burn, leaving the voters a choice between the far-right Rubio and himself, b

Aug 24, 2010 Wed, Jul. 07 Electoral Vote Predictor

Poll: Tea Party Supporters Are Conservative Republicans     Permalink

While the media have given the impression that tea party supporters are angry independents who are very unhappy with the health care bill and the Obama administration generally, a new Gallup poll shows otherwise. The poll shows that 80% of the tea partiers are conservative Republicans, 15% are Democrats, and only 6% are independents. This is not entirely surprising since the initial organization and funding for the tea party rallies came from FreedomWorks, a group run by former House majority leader Dick Armey (R). In particular, comparisons between the tea partiers now and Ross Perot's supporters in the 1990s have no validity since Perot really did draw from supporters of both parties. It is probably a given that nearly all tea partiers will vote for Republican candidates in November, but that's hardly a surprise if they are indeed nearly all Republicans.

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