The Daily Widget celebrates its two-month anniversary! :party:
The 19th falls on a Saturday this month, so I thought I’d do the monthly scorecard today. And I picked a very good day to do it, as Obama sees huge jumps in trading for his swing states today.
Only three items are down from last month: Obama’s two electoral vote projections from Electoral-Vote.com and FiveThirtyEight.com, and Intrade trading for Nebraska. The national daily tracking polls stay flat from last month, and everything else improves for Obama.
About those huge jumps in trading for the swing states today … Indiana is now
in the Zone, moving up 4.80 to 40.00. Topping Indiana’s move is Wisconsin, taking a leap to 84.90 from 78.00 yesterday. Not to be outdone, Michigan jumps 4.40 to 79.50 while New Mexico steps further away from the Zone, up 3.20 to 72.00. Also seeing good increases are South Carolina (+2.00), Iowa (+1.50) and Missouri (+1.40).
Obama is now leading overall in the swing states with 57.1% to McCain’s 42.9% (+14.2), according to our Wigand Electoral Average Total.
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NEW STATE POLLSUm, oops! Remember what I said yesterday about McCain not leading in a state by 20 points or greater? Well, Kansas has stepped up. McCain leads Obama by 23 points there, according to Rasmussen. Oregon gets stronger for Obama, but not quite safe yet. California continues to show a huge Obama lead.
California – Obama 54, McCain 30 (The Field Poll, 7/14, +/- 3.9, 672 LV)
Kansas – Obama 35, McCain 58 (Rasmussen, 7/14, +/- 4.5, 500 LV)
Oregon – Obama 49, McCain 40 (Rasmussen, 7/14, +/- 4.5, 500 LV)
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WIDGETS^ This is what we refer to as the “Widget”. In the white section, it shows Obama’s and McCain’s electoral vote projection from three different sources. 270 would be a majority. In the yellow section, it shows three sources of trading and averages for the candidates. The scale for these is 0 to 100, with 50 being a majority. Intrade shows the trading, while RCP-av shows the aggregate average of all the state polls. The Wigand Electoral Average is our own indicator, and shows how the candidates will do if the undecideds nationwide break the same way as the swing states.^ The Wigand Electoral Average is our own indicator, and shows how the candidates will do if the undecideds nationwide break the same way as the swing states. Each of the twelve swing states are listed below the indicator’s current score. The closing figures on Intrade are shown next to each state, with a column to show the change from the previous day. The scale for these is 0 to 100, with 50 being a majority.* * * * * * *
DAILY TRACKING^ This graph shows the daily tracking of Obama’s projected electoral votes from three sources. 270 is a majority of the electoral votes. The blue line shows daily tracking from 538.com, which projects what the outcome should be on election day. The red line shows daily tracking from Electoral-Vote.com, which shows a current snapshot of Obama’s electoral progress if the undecideds break evenly. The green line is my own projection, and it shows a current snapshot of Obama’s electoral progress if the undecideds break the same way as the swing states. A trend line is used (dashed green line) to show the average progress since May 19 and possible route for the next seven days.^ This graph shows Obama’s green line and red line from the previous graph, and compares it to John Kerry’s 2004 progress (orange line) as shown from Electoral-Vote.com. (Both the red line and the orange line show data from Electoral-Vote.com)^ Wigand vs. National Polls. The Wigand Electoral Average uses both poll averages and trading (swing states), and this graph compares it to the national tracking polls from Gallup, Rasmussen and Real Clear Politics (average).^ This graph shows the daily tracking of the swing states total from the Wigand Electoral Average widget above (second chart from the top). The scale is 0 to 1200, with 600 being a majority. It is currently at 671.70 (the highest it has ever been). To show Obama’s progress in the swing states, divide the latest closing figure (671.70) by 1200. Obama is winning the swing states by 55.98%, compared to 44.02% for McCain.^ Wigand vs. Trading. The Wigand Electoral Average uses both poll averages and trading (swing states), and this graph compares it to the closing trading figures from Intrade (people buying shares with real money) and Rasmussen Markets (people using fake money).^ I am projecting 126,750,000 million votes on election day, which is the total 2004 votes plus population growth for each state. A total projected popular vote is calculated for each candidate based on projected votes on election day this year multiplied by each state’s current poll results. This graph shows the daily tracking of the popular vote calculations.^ This graph shows the daily tracking of each swing state’s closing figure on Intrade. The scale is 0 to 100 with 50 being a majority. I commonly refer to the range from 40.00 to 60.00 as “The Zone” because the states in The Zone are true swing states this year.* * * * * * *
Yesterday’s WidgetFull Weekly TrackingPast editions of THE MATHSources:
Pollster.com
FiveThirtyEight.com
Electoral-Vote.com
Intrade
Rasmussen Markets
RCP Average
RCP Latest PollsWhat is this? THE MATH’s Daily Widget was created to track multiple daily sources which measure the potential success of Barack Obama’s presidential campaign. Projected Electoral Votes are on a scale of 0 to 538, with 270 being a majority, or projected win. Trading and Averages are on a scale of 0 to 100, with 50.1 being a majority, or projected win.
The Wigand Electoral Average uses public polling results to determine base states for both parties and a short list of swing states, and combines the actual electoral votes from base states with a weighted Intrade calculation for electoral votes from swing states to derive an average on a scale of 0 to 100. On this scale, greater than 50.00 is considered a win for Barack Obama. An average of 50.10 would yield 270 electoral votes, and an average of 100.00 would yield 538 electoral votes. More Information As always, I’m open to your feedback and suggestions, and I will be happy to explain anything!Feel free to use these charts and graphs anywhere on Democratic Underground.
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