The keys I'm talking about here are the 13 that have been proven to win
the White House, according to presidential predictions expert Allan Lichtman, who has accurately picked nine of the last ten elections.
A challenger candidate's scandal isn't one of
them.
For example, look at impact of the infamous "Access Hollywood" tape of Donald Trump making lascivious remarks about women, which surfaced just before the 2016 election.
When the
recording was released, political experts thought it was going to be devastating to Trump’s campaign. As it turned out, it was merely a blip in FiveThirtyEight’s polling average for Trump,
and it barely moved the needle in Cambridge Analytica’s proprietary polling data in battleground states.
Trump’s supporters didn’t care -- or they didn’t care enough --
to change their minds about voting for Trump. He still went on to win the presidency that year (though he did lose the popular vote).
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In fact, Lichtman’s keys are more accurate
than the last ten elections would suggest. He ran them against elections data going back to 1860 and they produced the correct result for the popular vote in every case.
The popular
and the electoral college votes have aligned in all but four U.S. presidential elections, most recently diverging in 2016. That means there is a one-in-12 chance it could happen again in 2024,
although it’s unlikely.
When you dig into them, these keys indicate the vast majority of what we talk about in political races is meaningless.
My former colleagues
who still work in political consulting will hate me for saying this, but according to Lichtman’s research, little of what we did made a difference.
“Nothing either party
has said or done during the Fall campaign has ever changed its prospects at the polls," Lichtman writes in "Predicting the Next President: They Keys to the White House," noting, "Debates, television appearances, fund-raising, advertising, news coverage, and
campaign strategies – the usual grist for the punditry mills – count for virtually nothing on Election Day. The only issues that matter are the ones for which the results are already
in."
According to Lichtman, the fate of an incumbent candidate is mostly attributable to the administration's performance. There is little that a challenger can do – good or bad – to
affect the outcome of an election.
Looking at prediction market data Friday morning -- the morning after the Trump verdict was first announced -- shows the markets have actually been ticking up
for Trump. That said, the markets probably haven't had enough time to respond materially to the news.
The University of Iowa's IEM (Iowa
Electronic Markets) still favors a Democratic presidential election win, but the party's lead went down.
In IEM’s Winner-Take-All (WTA) market, the last price was 0.748 for the Democrats
vs. 0.270 for Republicans. Last month, the IEM WTA numbers were 0.92 and 0.18, respectively.
PredictIt, another prediction market I'm tracking, now has Trump leading by a small
margin vs. Biden. Last month, the opposite was true. Although, its generic market -- "Which party wins the presidency in 2024?" -- still favors a Democratic win (51 cents for Democrats vs. 49 cents
for Republicans). The PredictIt markets are so close they sometimes contradict themselves.
The polls also probably haven’t had enough time to respond to the news.
Fivethirtyeight's polling average still has Trump ahead by a small amount – 41.3% Trump vs. 39.3% for Biden. In my last writing, the numbers were 41.6% for Trump and 40.9% for Biden.
As it relates to the keys, waning support for a third-party candidate (in this case RFK Jr., and possibly just-announced Joe Manchin), the absence of a Biden-related scandal, no foreign
military failures and a foreign military success would be more likely to improve Biden’s chances of winning than Trump’s recent conviction.