Posted on 04/04/2016 10:29:28 PM PDT by 2ndDivisionVet
Republicans are expected to win the White House under two economic models that have accurately forecast presidential elections for decades.
A third model run by Moodys Analytics predicts Democrats will win the White House, in part because of President Obamas rising approval rating.
The three models are being challenged like never before by the presence of GOP presidential front-runner Donald Trump, whose campaign has shaken up politics.
Trumps fights with Ted Cruz and his other GOP rivals have electrified his supporters but have turned off other voters. A Washington Post-ABC poll last week found that 67 percent of registered voters held an unfavorable view of the outspoken billionaire. That has given hope to Democrats that even with a weakened Hillary Clinton as their nominee, their party could cruise to victory.
As economists this is a very unusual election and theres a lot more uncertainty introduced this time around that could upset the balance and the historical relationship of how marginal voters vote, said Dan White, an economist with Moodys Analytics who oversees the firms monthly election model.
Ray Fair, a Yale professor who launched his model in 1978, told The Hill that while all elections include unruly features that an economic model cant pick up, this one seems particularly unusual.
If theres any time in which personalities would trump the economy it would be this election, Fair said.
Fairs model has correctly forecast all but three presidential races since 1916 but was wrong in 2012, when it predicted a narrow loss for Obama to Mitt Romney.
It relies on just three pieces of information: per capita growth rate of gross domestic product in the three quarters before an election, inflation over the entire presidential term and the number of quarters during the term growth per capita exceeds 3.2 percent.
Given the sluggish economy, his model doesnt show enough growth under Obama to predict a Democratic win in the election. In his most recent forecast from January, his model predicted a 45.66 percent share of the presidential vote for the Democratic candidate, less than the 49 percent it predicted in 2012.
The other two models, unlike Fairs, consider the incumbent presidents approval rating. In both cases, Obamas improving favorability helps his partys chances of winning the White House. But only one of those models predicts a Democratic win.
Emory Universitys Alan Abramowitz, whose model has correctly predicted every outcome since 1992, forecasts a Republican win.
It measures the incumbent president's job-approval rating by the end of June of the election year; the economy's growth during the first half of year, especially during the second quarter; and how long the incumbent party has been in the White House.
By this methodology, the Democratic candidate can expect to receive 48.7 percent of the vote with Obama's approval rating at 50 percent according to his most recent calculation.
But since that prediction, Obamas approval rating has ticked up to 52 percent.
Moodys arrives at a similar result, but one that is better for Democrats.
That model, which hasnt missed an election since it was created in 1980, awards Electoral College votes to each party based on state-by-state outcomes. The most important economic variable is income growth by state, including job and wage growth, hours worked and the quality of the jobs being created in the two years leading up to an election. The model also factors in home and gasoline prices on a state level, as well as presidential approval numbers.
The Moodys equation also includes an additional dummy variable that penalizes Democrat incumbents, stemming from the theory that Democrats and Democrat-leaning independent voters are more likely to switch sides and vote for a Republican candidate than vice versa.
Moodys latest model, set for release this week, shows that the Democratic nominee would take 332 electoral votes compared to 206 for the Republican nominee.
The main driver of the change was the president's approval rating, a first-time variable added into the model this year, White said.
The president's approval rating has risen 3 percentage points since the first model was released in August.
White says the unruly GOP primary may be helping Obama.
The gains lately could be construed as a reflection of what a mess the primary process has become in recent weeks, he said. Trump, who has high unfavorable ratings among some voter groups, could be giving Obamas approval rating a boost.
Abramowitz told The Atlanta-Journal Constitution last week that all the noise being made by the presidential campaign, especially by the Republican campaign, has taken attention away from what may turn out to be more significant for the general election Barack Obamas rising approval rating.
His research has found that the presidents approval rating is an essential predictor of the election results even when the president is not on the ballot, and Obama's has risen to its highest level in many months.
White said that one of the most frequently asked questions he gets is whether a Trump variable could be added into the model to test out how his brand of fireworks factors in.
No way, he said.
The model doesnt know or care if there are two or 10 candidates, he said. It knows the economics and whether marginal swing voters will keep the incumbent party in or not.
In fact, their models are designed to sweep away the effects of boisterous personalities and the usual ebbs and flows of a long presidential campaign season and instead track specific economic factors that voters deem most important.
Justin Wolfers, an economics professor at the University of Michigan and senior fellow at the Brookings Institution who has researched the reliability of economic models, said that while every election is different the point of the statistical models is to try to find the underlying similarity across all of them.
So the logic that says that these models should have worked over the past few decades also says that they should work in this election cycle, too, he told The Hill.
There's no reason to think the models should do better or worse in 2016, he said.
LOL, hey guys and gals! “Even” with Trump. “Even” with the guy who won the swing states of NH, NV, FLA, VA and won MI, MA, plus the south! “Even” him! Did I mention MO?
I’ll repeat myself.
THIS is the opportunity for Americans to truly get a conservative, something we haven’t had since Ronald Reagan. Something I’ve never had the pleasure to vote for, because I was born in ‘74. And perhaps the last chance we’ll ever get to elect one.
History is on our side considering no party has won 3 presidential elections in a row since George H.W. Bush, and democrats haven’t done it in over half a century.
This is our time. This is our chance. I implore you. Please do not merely vote passion. Please do not vote populism.
Yes, Mr. Trump would be better than the democrat nominated. But let us not set the bar so low! Ted Cruz is a Constitutional conservative that has backed up his words with his actions. He is the clear choice, if you are truly a conservative. Let reason rule your actions, as Senator Cruz has. This is not about the candidates wives, or globalism conspiracy theories. THIS is about our future, and not succumbing to dirty tactics, the dishonesty being the purview of democrats.
I will vote Donald Trump if need be, because he is superior to the alternative. But please god remember, we have a superior alternative now. We can nominate Ted Cruz, a Constitutional conservative that has fought for our values in front of the Supreme Court, called Mitch McConnell the liar he is on the Senate floor, and has fought his own party every inch of the way for the good of the American people. Trump is words...Cruz is ACTION.
And discounting Bush the Elder, it’s been “Two terms, and out” for both parties since 1981.
The Democrats don’t have much ‘macht’; people seem to sense the real race is the GOP, so it’s supercharged.
Hear, hear!
I will vote R. regardless of the name net to it.
The thought of Hillary in the WH with the other cast of characters in their inner circle seriously concerns me for the future. I’ll do it again if I have to, but I thought my days of fighting were over. She WILL take us there. I can honestly see her taking us to a full out civil war. She has no problem with people dying, no matter who it is, as long as she gets it her way. She’s already proven that.
Economics can drive an election. This is interesting.
As a postscript, my prediction is predicated on Trump being the nominee.
If we go a contested convention and lose due to the unelectable, but incredibly smooth Ted “Mr. Conservative” Cruz, we’re probably looking at a President Sanders or Clinton.
Then it’s, “Thanks Ted! Goodbye GOP, goodbye America.”
The main reason Barry Goldwater went down in flames was the election took place 11 months after the Kennedy assassination. Lincoln could not have won that election.
Ditto here. As long as he’s in the mix, I back Cruz, but once the primary is over, the nominee — be it Trump or Cruz, will have my vote.
It’s of paramount importance Her Infernal Malevolence is kept out of the White House.
U agree with your assessment,
Trump can beat Hillary. That is why she is working hard to have him taken out in the R primary by the GOPe, who solf out to the Dems. And I do mean that literally.
Tech billionaires (major Dem donors) plot with GOP leaders at exclusive island resort to stop Trump
If that is a true stat, the only reason OblaBlas ratings are going up is because the republicans are more busy slashing each other rather than focusing on the Oblabla/Clinton messes.
I’m all behind Trump now. Cruz lost what little credibility he had left with me. I listened to Hannity on the radio while I was driving home last night. Sen Cruz confirmed he will not drop out....even if he cant get to 1237. Hannity specifically asked him “what if you cant get to 1237”. He would rather throw it to open convention. Really??
The problem is that we still haven't seen what happens when the media really turns on him. Looking at the McCain run, we see that McCain turned from media darling to media goat the day he was nominated. The media clearly goes easy on the least electable Republican until he's nominated, and then unloads with everything afterward. there is a boatload of ammunition against Trump.
We've seen a hint of it with Anderson Cooper and his "With all due respect, that's the response of a five year old", to Trump's "Cruz started it". There's a whole lot more where that came from. I would certainly vote for Trump over Hillary, but the worry I have is about those who just stay home on election day.
These models didn’t “forecast” anything. You can’t retroactively predict something that’s already happened. And I would tell you that economic models of political contests have been around for decades and don’t usually work well.
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