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Reli's avatar

Saw this reported a couple months ago in the Postrider too (https://thepostrider.com/allan-lichtman-is-famous-for-correctly-predicting-the-2016-election-the-problem-he-didnt/), glad to see more are catching on to the fact he's actually not been right but still tells everyone he has.

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Joe Netti's avatar

Good piece, but still lacking some details for a complete argument. Whichever way you cut it, electoral or popular, 9/10 of the most recent elections were predicted by the model. Yes the model should choose and stick with one way of determining winner, but it is better than any other seemingly non-lucky system I’ve seen. It didn’t mispredict any election when the winner won the popular and electoral votes in the last 10 elections (since the model was created).

In terms to its subjectivity, one example you bring up is charisma. Sure, this is subjective and it would be hard to make a program or machine answer this question. However, if you pay attention to the feeling and excitement that Obama created from his “change”, “believe” campaign (it *felt* like he generated this optimism for the nation). I think while this is a feeling, it is a feeling that enough people in the country got (I didn't like him at the time but felt it, though I was a young teenager). He was also the first black president and that alone drove so many new people to vote. I would count some of the impact from that as charisma. And it is fine to “sneak in” polls, because it isn’t sneaking them in! It’s just using hard evidence to try to see if people think he’s charismatic. Aren’t the types of poll questions for the model to avoid are: “which candidate do you prefer?”, Which candidate will you vote for?”, etc?

If you are looking for a theory that is like physics, good luck — but this is *far* from astrology.

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