Wednesday, October 29, 2008

Bad year for third parties?

As is stated every election, voting for a third party is pointless, steals votes from more viable candidates, etc. Certainly, after the 2000 election, people are skittish about voting for third parties if not out right opposed. However, even after the 2000 debacle, 2004 wasn't the worst year for third parties, although it was pretty bad. Every year since 1992, the number of third party votes has declined. Of course, 1992 was an exceptional year, it certainly seems to set a pretty strong trend.

Year - Total Third Party Vote
1992 - 19.55%
1996 - 10.05%
2000 - 3.74%
2004 - 1.00%

According to a regression model I made, this would mean that in 2008, third parties would only get 0.44%. Of course, the third parties do have a few things going for them. For one, the Libertarian Party and Green Party are running former congress members as their candidates. So for once, the third parties are running experienced candidates. Unfortunately, most Libertarians seem disappointed with Bob Barr who is more or less just a Republican and the Green Party candidate is a nutjob whose ability to maintain her seat for 12 years completely shocks me. For those interested, Nader is running again, but I think he'll do worse than he did last time.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Best Political Blunder

Republican Congresswoman, Michele Bachmann, appeared on MSNBC to drum up support for McCain by criticizing Obama and his connections to Bill Ayers. In the course of the interview she insinuated that people with liberal views were anti-American and that members of congress should be investigated for holding anti-American views. This set off an interesting chain of events:

-Instead of energizing the Republican base, it energized the Democratic base, angry about being called anti-American.
-By the next morning Bachmann's opponent, Tinklenberg, had raised roughly half a million dollars.
-The DCCC (which helps funds Democratic candidates) gave Tinklenberg's campaign $1 million having previously ignored the campaign.
-The RNCC (which helps funds Republican candidates) dropped funding for two TV ads it was running for Bachmann.
-A former Republican governor of Minnesota endorsed Obama citing Bachmann's comments as a turning point for him.
-Polling from before the interview had Bachmann ahead by 3%, afterwards Tinklenberg was ahead by 4%
-40% of voters in her district said that they were less likely to vote for her because of her comments. Only 8% said they were more likely to vote for her.

It's a good day for democracy when people realize that criticizing traditional political beliefs isn't treasonous.

Monday, October 13, 2008

2008 Election Trends

A long time ago, I made some charts using data from the 1996, 2000, and 2004 elections to predict possible trends in how states vote. I did this by removing the overall swing from each state's results and looked out how votes in each individual state changed independent of national trends. I then extrapolated these numbers to find what the results might be in 2008. One of the things I found was that many of the states that were very close in the 2004 election were trending towards becoming more Democratic, but nearly all of the states that were trending towards Republican were already Republican. Based on these trends I found that if the final popular vote in 2008 was exactly the same as in 2004, the Democrats would gain 10 electoral votes, from Nevada and New Mexico. Not enough to win, but give the Democrats just a 1% swing, they would win Iowa, Ohio, and Colorado and thus the presidency. To win, Republicans would have to keep the national swing towards the Democrats to less than 1%.

I had forgotten about all this for several months, but I became interested again after North Carolina became a swing state. I didn't remember anything in my model saying that North Carolina could go Democrat even in the best scenario. I used the current numbers (as of Oct. 12) on Fivethirtyeight.com to find the predicted swing for the 2008 election, 7.9%. Putting this number into my model gives McCain just a 3% lead in North Carolina. While this is still a comfortable lead for McCain, it's much closer than Bush's 12.4% margin of victory in 2004. I found a lot of other random things in my model when comparing it to the current polls, like Obama is doing incredibly well in Alaska despite Sarah Palin, but I'll leave all that until after the election.

Wednesday, October 01, 2008

Now I have to eat kangaroos

BBC News

Whenever I go to a restaurant that serves buffalo, I have to get a buffalo burger. My reason for this is that in the regions were buffalo live, they are better for the environment than cattle. So by choosing buffalo over beef, I'm, hopefully, creating demand to shift ranches from cattle to buffalo production.

Now it seems that I should add kangaroos as a food I should always get if a restaurant serves it. Kangaroos produce much less methane than cattle so they're better for environment in terms of climate change. I would also imagine that they're better also for the local environment just like buffalo are. One problem though, I've never been to a restaurant that had kangaroo meat on the menu.