SolomonW <
Solo...@citi.com> wrote in
news:10sl0aank8opc.b...@40tude.net :
OK, then, evidently he assumed that the winner of the popular vote would
also probably win the electoral vote and that 1876 and 1888 were rare
exceptions unlikely to recur. But while he was wrong about that, the fact
remains that the keys method (as he interpreted it) did get the winner of
the popular vote right, and that was my point: what I said was that using
it he "has correctly predicted the winner of the popular vote in every US
presidential election since 1984." Very likely someday in some close
election his method will be wrong about the popular vote, too, but it
hasn't happened yet.
OTOH, it is questionable whether the keys method really tells us much we
couldn't know from simpler models. This is Jonathan Bernstein's critique:
"What he has is a combination of things that are generally causes (such as
the economy) of incumbent party success, things that are effects of
incumbent party success (such as the incumbent winning renomination
uncontested and third party challenges), and things that are arbitrary and
dubious (such as whether the candidates have 'charisma').
"It's not surprising that you can 'predict' the winner with that batch of
stuff. After all, while Lichtman's system has worked since he debuted it
for the 1984 cycle, a much simpler system that predicts the incumbent party
wins barring an election-year recession also successfully calls the winners
from 1984 through 2008, at least if you count 2000 for Gore (as Lichtman
does). That doesn't make Lichtman wrong as much as it just means his system
isn't telling us much that we don't already know otherwise."
http://plainblogaboutpolitics.blogspot.com/2011/08/not-buying-keys.html
(I'm not sure whether either Lichtman's model--which makes an election-year
recession one of the keys--nor Bernstein's simpler model--which makes it
*the* determining factor--actually works for 1992, when the recession was,
at least technically, over. I suppose the answer is that people
*perceived* the economy as still being in recession in 1992. But that was
true in 2012 as well, at least as late as April.
http://tinyurl.com/bl8s8fc
Anyway, Bernstein's simpler model is open to the objection that unlike
Lichtman's it is definitely wrong about some *pre-* 1984 elections, e.g.,
1952 and 1968.)
--
David Tenner
dte...@ameritech.net