October 28, 2024

The Usual Suspects—WI, MI, PA

It seems as if this presidential campaign has been going on forever—with more twists and turns than a season of Game of Thrones. Not only is it exhausting, it’s expensive. The Wall Street Journal recently estimated that a U.S. presidential election costs 40 times more per person than equivalent elections in the U.K. and Germany.

And after all the rallies, debates and TV spots, it’s probably going to come down to three states—Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania. The so-called “Blue Wall” in the industrial heartland of America has usually determined—in some combination or other—the eventual winner. This year is probably no different.

If you believe all the recent polling (and, of course, I do), it appears that Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are dead even in all three states—according to 538 polling averages. And, while Trump is currently leading in places like Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina, all of those states are close enough that they could flip back and forth in the next week. And that could dramatically change the electoral map.

In fact, a shift of a few thousand votes in multiple states could result in Electoral College landslides for either candidate. That’s how crazily close this race is. And yet, it’s still probably more likely than not that Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania will hold the key to victory. We’ll all know next Tuesday night—maybe.

October 23, 2024

Would A Reformed Electoral College Have Changed The 2020 Election?

With less than two weeks to go until the 2024 presidential election, we decided to estimate how a reformed Electoral College (proportional distribution vs. winner-take-all) might have affected the outcome of the 2020 election. While we didn’t do an exhaustive analysis of all 435 congressional districts (something for a later doctoral dissertation), we focused on the 13 key battleground states of that election. Chances are that the trends we’d see in these battlegrounds would not be significantly different for the entire nation.

As you may recall, Joe Biden defeated Donald Trump with 306 electoral votes to Trump’s 232 (270 are needed to win). Also, Biden won the popular vote—garnering about 7 million more votes (81.2M) than Trump (74.2M). 

We tallied up all of the congressional district wins that each candidate banked in those battleground states that they lost, and then re-allocated those votes using the proportional method. Basically, this gives the losing candidate in each state some Electoral College credit for winning part of that state.

Interestingly, the re-allocation did very little to change the outcome. Again, we’re only doing this for these 13 battlegrounds, but we found that Trump had a net gain of 5 electoral votes (237 up from 232) and Biden saw a net loss of 5 votes (301 down from 306). While there are scattered other significant congressional district wins for Trump in states he lost (e.g., 9 districts in California, 7 in New York), they likely aren’t enough to erase the 64 vote lead enjoyed by Biden. Plus, Biden had other congressional district wins in states that Trump won.

The bottom line is that this Electoral College reform is a somewhat better match of the popular vote result, without significantly altering the outcome. More importantly, it re-enfranchises millions of voters who might otherwise “waste” their vote on a “losing” candidate in the winner-take-all format.