Macksbrownies
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I look at it as the more republicans voting early the less voting on Election Day. You cannot convince me that McFascist will end up with more votes than he did in 2020.
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I mean, the US population has increased by a meager amount (about 1.2% total) since 2020, so even if we have a repeat by percentages of the Biden election, Trump would end up getting more votes.I look at it as the more republicans voting early the less voting on Election Day. You cannot convince me that McFascist will end up with more votes than he did in 2020.
They have been pushing early voting big time for the last 4 years. So yeah it should be changing to less of a partisan splitI look at it as the more republicans voting early the less voting on Election Day. You cannot convince me that McFascist will end up with more votes than he did in 2020.
Yes, I'm thinking that is a canary in the election coal mine, but as noted in a previous post, the percentage of female voters and the female turnout by state in 2020 varied pretty widely. So if you see women representing 55-56% of the Georgia or North Carolina vote, that is NOT an improvement over 2020, but if you saw that number in Nevada or Wisconsin it would be a HUGE increase in female voters from 2020.Harris will win with women, heftily.
What I heard some experts say, and what I am seeing in these early voting numbers, too, is not focused on the D vs R turnout, but % of votes by women vs by men. There is no rhyme or reason for a gender turnout discrepancy other than motivation. This isn't 1890 (sorry Trump) when many women were not working. So it does seem there may be a big enthusiasm gap in genders. And if that materializes, the polls will end up very, very wrong. If they model similar turnout by gender, but women turn out 5-10% higher than men, it could lead to a rather big win for the good gals
But given there is even a bigger gender gap forming it could be substantialYes, I'm thinking that is a canary in the election coal mine, but as noted in a previous post, the percentage of female voters and the female turnout by state in 2020 varied pretty widely. So if you see women representing 55-56% of the Georgia or North Carolina vote, that is NOT an improvement over 2020, but if you saw that number in Nevada or Wisconsin it would be a HUGE increase in female voters from 2020.![]()
I think 56% of women in Ga would still be an improvement as women have continued to move democraticYes, I'm thinking that is a canary in the election coal mine, but as noted in a previous post, the percentage of female voters and the female turnout by state in 2020 varied pretty widely. So if you see women representing 55-56% of the Georgia or North Carolina vote, that is NOT an improvement over 2020, but if you saw that number in Nevada or Wisconsin it would be a HUGE increase in female voters from 2020.![]()
Well hell, they should've just asked yellowjacket, he coulda told em that the betting markets are by far the most reliable way to accurately pick the winner of the election...No method of polling—by phone or online—emerged as the most reliable, leaving few clues for improving surveys.
Again, this is where the race is. Kamala +2, +2.5 nationally. It hasn't budged. I mean, it doesn't matter to me if you want to keep posting polls, as many posters seem to like it, but the information:freakout ratio is not good. They are communicating nothing, and they just get liberals feeling freaked out. I would recommend people stop looking at these things.
Not to speak for super but I don't think that's his point. If +2 isn't enough under the revised polling models, then it's not enough and Kamala will lose. But it's not going to move to +4 or to +1 in the next two weeks. The spread has been shockingly steady for months now, which indicates everyone who will decide has already done so.Some of the freakout comes from the fact that +2 may not get the job done in electoral college math...
I think its still less about the +2 and more of where Trump's numbers lie. If he's at 46% or even 47% for that matter, then that is good. Even if Harris is at 48% there's still a percentage or three unaccounted for, and the hope is those fall for her as they did Biden in 2020, and Obama in 2012.Some of the freakout comes from the fact that +2 may not get the job done in electoral college math...
1. I think there is a pretty solid consensus that today's prediction markets are worse than forecasting models. That's not a law of nature; better prediction markets could yield better information. Most of the positive evidence for prediction markets comes from decades ago; our recent experience is that prediction markets don't work very well for reasons I've already outlined in some detail.I just read through a few things that popped up, and what I saw was no clear consensus - some papers seem to argue that betting markets are better predictors (e.g., your link, and this), others argue that they are worse (example, example), some argue that it's unclear what performs better (example) or that they contain the same information (link). So in short, I don't see how any sensible person could survey that literature and come to the conclusion that betting markets are more accurate than polls.
As someone who's career is built around figuring out ways to measure things robustly, one thing that has irritated me in the post-538 era (these poll-conglomerating "models") is that there is never an honest discussion about actual information content. Or to put it another way, what, if any, significance is there to someone's fancy model assigning 55% "probability" for one candidate to win? It doesn't take a fancy model to quickly assess that the range of plausible outcomes for the US presidential election has 2 possibilities. The simplest model one could build would then be a coin flip - in fact I've just constructed such a model! I even ran 10,000 simulations of the election, and guess what, it's a real horse race with Kamala Harris winning 50.7% of the time, and Trump winning 49.3% of the time. How in the world would one ever construct a statistical test to robustly show that my coin flip model is less predictive than the NYT or 538 or whatever simulator giving one candidate a 53% chance and the other a 47% change. Do you know how many elections for which you'd have to have actual data (results) to be able to distinguish in a statistically robust way that the NYT/538 models are fundamentally different from a coin flip? The answer is a lot, but we just get the one.
This is PRECISELY the reason that the filibuster is awful. The filibuster makes it so change comes very slowly. It also obscures accountability, because people blame the WH for not making things better when the real problem is that it takes 60 votes to do anything. We need change to offer clarity. Let the Pubs repeal Obamacare and see what happens. If it turns out to be a disaster, then everyone will know, the Pubs will lose the next election, Obamacare will be restored and the Pubs lose everyone's trust. That seems like a hard trade in the short term but in the long term it's important. It would keep our political parties honest. It would also lead risk-averse legislators toward bipartisanship, because nobody wants to be solely responsible for a failure or left out of a success.Some poor people in Georgia say they have no reason to vote, a decision that could sway election
"... Linda Solomon, 58, said she and her daughter aren’t voting “ because nothing changes ” no matter who sits in the White House. “Why you gonna vote and ain’t nobody doing nothing?”
While Harris has excited Black voters in and around Atlanta, with its wealthier and better-educated electorate, interviews in Bibb County suggest voters living in far worse circumstances are not moved by the historic nature of her candidacy. Democrats won the county by a 2-1 margin in 2020, and Republicans are increasingly confident they can erode Democrats’ historic advantage of winning roughly 90% of all Black votes.
... Harris has focused on the middle class, and she has offered plans for small businesses and home buyers.
In places like Macon, that could prove a difficult sale. The clients at Mother’s Nest are not business owners or homebuyers anytime soon, and even Harris’ plan to take on grocery chains for price gouging doesn’t resonate with a population living in food deserts.
... AP VoteCast, a survey of both voters and nonvoters, showed that nonvoters in 2020 tended to be poorer, younger, less educated, unmarried and minorities. The data, collected by the AP-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research, also found that among voters in 2020, 15% reported having a household income under $25,000 in the previous year, compared with roughly 3 in 10 nonvoters. Put those characteristics against a population of 27 million adults who live below poverty, according to the census, and the figures suggest that people on the lower rungs of the economic ladder probably make up a significant subset of all nonvoters.
... In 2020, the turnout of people eligible to vote in Georgia was 66.3%, nearly matching the national figure of 66.8%, according to the Center for Inclusive Democracy, with the lowest turnouts among Black and Latino voters.
... A majority of Bibb County’s 150,000-plus residents are minorities and over 60% are unmarried. Four in 10 are younger than 30 and nearly half have a high school education or less. The poverty rate is above 25%, more than double the state and national averages.
In interviews with dozens of single moms, grandmothers and some men, it was clear that the campaigns are not addressing their problems. ..."
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Some poor people in Georgia say they have no reason to vote, a decision that could sway election
There are more than 47,000 people in Bibb County, Georgia, about 80 miles south of Atlanta, who are eligible to vote but don't. That's four times the number of votes that President Joe Biden carried the state by in 2020.www.pbs.org
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This is not a new development. Before I went to law school, I worked for a community-based service program at UNC (among other jobs) back in the early 90s and nothing I read here sounds any different from the common conversations then.
It's a vicious cycle, though -- the poor are least likely to vote and politicians frame their campaigns around what reasonably LIKELY VOTERS want, with the biggest pool of likely voters being the middle class (though the most certain to vote being the wealthy and elderly). And in a way, these folks aren't wrong about limitations on how their life might improve depending on who is in the White House, though they often may not appreciate how things could get even worse depending on who is making policy decisions (not that "things could be a whole lot worse" is a worthy political pitch).
Agreed. 2020 was different in that we had a global pandemic and so obviously the number of people voting early, and more importantly, the types of people voting early, was likely quite different from what it would have been without covid. So trying to use 2020 as a baseline for this year's election just doesn't work, as we no longer have a pandemic and so the types of people voting this year is likely going to be different. Also, early voting seems to be growing in popularity, so more Republicans may choose to vote early than in 2020. I don't think anybody, except maybe for those inside each campaign, really knows where this election is going. And the rest of us are left reading early voting returns and polls like tea leaves for clues, and some are getting more anxious/depressed/nervous by the day. It's going to be a long two weeks until the election.(cont'd)
"... Bonier also said that based on his firm’s modeling, he was seeing bright spots for Democrats in Michigan and Wisconsin—states that don’t break down early voting totals by party.
In North Carolina, where early voting started Thursday, the partisan split among voters so far has been evenly divided. Democrats had more of an advantage in 2020. The state is seen as a must-win for Trump, but Harris’s campaign has invested heavily there.
“Looking at who is showing up, I would say Republicans should feel good and Democrats may have some work to do,” said Michael Bitzer, a professor at Catawba College who closely tracks early voting.
... So far, those voting early have skewed heavily to older voters. Nearly half of early votes so far are from voters older than 65, according to the University of Florida’s Election Lab. Only 5% of voters ages 18 to 25 have cast early ballots, the data show.
A new Suffolk University/USA Today national poll of 1,000 likely voters found that of those respondents who had already voted, Harris leads Trump by 63% to 34%. "
NOBODY KNOWS and everyone is trying to extrapolate from available data and past polling errors.
Yes, that's correct. If you're freaking out about +2 because of stupid EC, fine -- but why subject yourself to that same +2 freakout every day?Some of the freakout comes from the fact that +2 may not get the job done in electoral college math.
Not to speak for super but I don't think that's his point. If +2 isn't enough under the revised polling models, then it's not enough and Kamala will lose. But it's not going to move to +4 or to +1 in the next two weeks. The spread has been shockingly steady for months now, which indicates everyone who will decide has already done so.