I learned a long time ago that elections can be influenced by any
number of almost random story lines but that the weight of opinion
will tend to dominate. It took an extraordinary effort in 2008 to
elect Obama including keeping the candidate in a bubble and blocking
access to plenty of unflattering information. Today he must run on
his current resume and it is not compelling. It is hard to argue
that he is indispensable.
The weight of opinion is slightly against Obama and Romney's task has
been to reassure and motivate his natural audience and this has so
far succeeded completely with the debate performance. The debates
were always Obama's to lose and not so much Romney's to win.
Whatever happens tonight ( I wrote this Tuesday morning) Romney can
rec over from. I am not so sure that Obama has that option.
Thus Obama's main chance has to be a last minute event that draws
support to him. I am not sure it is possible and it is unlikely that
would miscue such an event either. He has shown remarkably sound
judgment. A more probable circumstance will be a slip by Obama that
puts Romney over the top and out of reach.
Professors Who
Predicted Right Result Since 1980 Foresee Romney Victory
Bob Adelmann
The New American
October 15, 2012
The forecast of the
2012 Presidential Election by Michael Berry and Kenneth Bicker,
political science professors at the University of Colorado, that
was released in August has been updated with more current
economic information, and the result is the same: a Romney win
as the economy continues to falter.
It takes 270 Electoral
College votes to win the presidency, and Berry and Bicker are
projecting that Governor Mitt Romney will win 330 of the 538 votes up
for grabs in November, while President Obama will receive just 208,
down from the 213 they predicted in August.
It’s the economy.
The model developed by the two professors has an uncanny track
record, correctly predicting each presidential election since 1980,
often with startling accuracy. In their paper originally published in
August by the American Political Science Association [APSA] along
with 12 other studies, it differed in its predictive “model” by
looking at two essential pieces of the economic puzzle: changes in
real per capita income — that is, net, after-tax, spendable income
— and unemployment rates. But their model doesn’t just
rely on the national numbers provided by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, which has been heavily criticized recently for its
inexplicable drop in the unemployment rate while real jobs in the
economy aren’t even reaching maintenance levels. It
relies also on state-by-state analyses of those same factors, which
appear to be more reliable. As the professors note:
In contrast to these
other Electoral College models [published by the APSA], our model
includes measures of change in real per capita income, as well as
national and state unemployment figures.
Accounting for both
changes in personal income and unemployment provides a more robust
approximation of state economic well-being and, thus, serves to model
the impact of retrospective evaluations of the incumbent party’s
stewardship of the economy…
The data incorporated
in our model are regularly released by the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) in the US Department of Commerce and the Bureau of
Labor Statistics in the US Department of Labor. This gives us
high-quality, predictably available data to use as the feedstock for
our model.
This is how
politically correct political science professors cover themselves:
just in the case the national data gets a little dicey, the numbers
from the states are more predictive:
The heart of our
forecast centers on the third set of independent variables. We use
two basic measures of economic conditions: unemployment levels and
change in real income per capita. Unemployment is measured in two
capacities. First is the national unemployment rate. The second is
the corresponding unemployment rate in each state…
Our third measure of
economic well-being taps the extent to which people have more or less
real disposable income at their discretion during the current
incumbent’s presidential term. The measure included in our model is
the percentage change in each state in real per capita non-farm
income from the fourth quarter of the prior presidential election
year to the first quarter of the current election year.
The unstated but
important underlying assumption by the professors is almost an iron
law of politics: people will vote their pocketbooks. People are
hurting, and that’s hurting Obama:
Putting these pieces
together, clearly President Obama is in electoral trouble. To be
sure, he enjoys some advantages. First, Obama’s successful campaign
in 2008 gives him a substantial leg up. He can lose some states that
he carried four years ago without losing the election. Second, a
prominent second-term incumbency advantage should prove advantageous.
Still, the big issue is the fragile economy. With an unemployment
rate in excess of 8%, Obama is about two-and-a-half points beyond the
break-even point for a Democrat running as the in-party candidate…
The states we predict
President Obama will carry include a substantially reduced set than
those he carried in 2008. This is supported by the fact that no
states won by McCain are predicted to flip to Obama.
What is striking about
our state-level economic indicator forecast is the expectation that
Obama will lose almost all of the states currently considered as
swing states, including North Carolina, Virginia, New Hampshire,
Colorado, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Ohio, and Florida.
Three other states that might be viewed as swing states — Michigan,
New Mexico, and Nevada — are predicted to stay in Obama’s column.
Our forecast is that the president will receive 208 Electoral College
votes, putting him well short of the 270 needed to win reelection.
The economy is having
an impact on other presidential predictions, moving the election
towards Romney as well. USA Today said on Sunday that
Obama’s perceived lead in Electoral College votes, 265 to 191 for
Romney, as recently as two weeks ago has now dropped precipitously to
just 201 to 191 currently, with 11 states considered to be “toss-ups”
with 146 votes at stake there.
Scott Rasmussen noted
that as of Monday, “Romney has had a slight lead or been tied on
nine of the past 10 days. Before that, Obama had been ahead or tied
for 16 consecutive days.” Rasmussen is still calling it a close
race, but “in a close race, even a small change can have a big
impact.”
Intrade, the online
betting site, has also seen a precipitous drop in support for
Obama, moving from an apparently invincible high approaching 80
percent to just over 60 percent as of this writing.
If the college
professors are right, and voters vote their pocketbooks, and the data
they are using to make their predictions are anywhere close to being
accurate, Romney should win in November. As the economy continues its
decline, so do Obama’s chances at reelection. Perhaps that’s
why he’s looking at buying a retirement mansion in Hawaii.
1 comment:
I will believe that you actually believe this when you tell us how many shares of Romney you own (intrade.com) You get two to one odds, so unless you are either gullible or lying, then you must own at least 50 shares?
If not, why not? If you really believe what you say, then it is not gambling to put your money where your mouth is.
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