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‘Scientific’ view forecasts a big Bush win
Polls may show the presidential race in a dead heat, but for a small band of academics who use scientific formulas to predict elections, President Bush is on his way to a sizable win. That’s the conclusion of a handful of political scientists who, with mixed results, have honed the art of election forecasting by devising elaborate mathematical formulas based on key measures of the nation’s economic health and the public’s political views. Most of these academics are predicting Bush, bolstered by robust economic growth, will win between 53 and 58 percent of the votes cast for him and his Democratic opponent John Kerry. Their track record for calling election outcomes months in advance has often been surprisingly accurate. In 1988, the models projected Bush’s father, former President George Bush, would win even though Massachusetts Gov. Michael Dukakis enjoyed a double digit poll leads that summer. And in 1996, one model came within a tenth of a percentage point of Clinton’s actual vote share. “You can look at certain fundamental indicators and anticipate how the campaign will play out,” said James Campbell, a professor at the State University of New York at Buffalo. But one glaring error is what the forecasters are perhaps best remembered for: They predicted in 2000 that Democrat Al Gore would win easily, pegging his total at between 53 and 60 percent of the two-party vote. This dealt a fatal blow to the models’ credibility, said Thomas Mann, a scholar at the Brookings Institution who has written about election forecasts. posted by knn |
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| in-my-opinion.orgPoliticsBush, Kerry, IraqPresident Bush will have a major win in November 2004 |
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[sarcasm]This will speed up the separation process of the US from the rest of the world. And one day China will attack the US and no European will help. And one day North US will start another war against the South US. And "United Northern States of America (UNSA)" will join the European Union.[/sarcasm] posted by knn |
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The time now is 8 January 2009, 00:01 php B.B. |