
Political pundits can and often do express
opinions without repercussions. They are rarely held to account for what they say, and there is little causal political research to prove them wrong.
It’s fair to say that
Biden didn’t have his best performance during 2024's first presidential debate, but that doesn’t mean he should quit. Predictive analytics don’t support that outcome.
We’re currently tracking several presidential election prediction methods – polling averages, a forecast based on the polls, prediction market results and a data-science
methodology called the 13 Keys. Let’s look at the last first.
The good news for Biden is that according to the 13 Keys presidential election prediction system, debates have a
low correlation with presidential election results.
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Research done by a history professor at American University instead point to the incumbent white-house-party-candidate’s
performance while in office as having the highest correlation to presidential election results.
The 13 Keys still predict a Biden popular vote victory. As far as I can tell, none of
the keys have turned since the author, Allan Lichtman, made his 2024 election prediction this past April.
On the polling side, we’re following FiveThirtyEight's presidential election polling average. Biden did move ahead in the polls after Trump’s felony conviction; however, they
flipped back to favor Trump after the debate.
You might think that the debate would have made a big difference in the polls, but that’s not the case. As of today, Sunday June
30, the average only shows Trump up by 1.3 percentage points. When accounting for statistical error, the candidates are basically tied.
Polls provide answers to the hypothetical
question – if the election were held today, who would win? FiveThirtyEight also produces presidential election forecast simulations that incorporate more data including poll results, economic
and demographic information.
On June 25th, prior to the debate, FiveThirtyEight’s forecast simulations had Biden winning 50 out of 100 simulations and Trump winning 49 out of
100. We’ll continue to track FiveThirtyEight for changes.
As it relates to prediction markets, the University of Iowa’s electronic market (IEM) still predicts the
democratic party candidate to win the presidency. However, the winner-take-all market moved closer to a tie after the debate.
IEM’s latest prices are 0.7 for a democratic win
versus 0.355 for a republican victory. Last month, IEM prices were 0.748 and 0.270, respectively.
The PredictIt prediction market had the largest amount of movement out of all the
predictive methods we’re tracking. It appears to be the most sensitive and least decisive.
In my experience, prediction markets bounce around a lot in the beginning when
they’re first made public before they settle on a prediction one way or the other. Once settled, they tend not to change that much. IEM is case in point -- it has been predicting a democratic
victory since the market was launched.
For its candidate-specific market, PredictIt is currently pricing a Trump win at 56 cents versus a Biden win at 30 cents. The numbers were a
lot closer last month and Biden was recently ahead after Trump’s felony convictions before the debate occurred.
The GOP also moved ahead in PredictIt’s generic-party
presidential election market. It’s pricing a GOP win at 57 cents and a DEM win at 47 cents.
PredictIt numbers for potential Biden replacements aren’t doing nearly as well
as Biden even after the debate – Kamala Harris and Gavin Newsom are both trading at 10 cents and Pete Buttigieg is trading at 2 cents.
To put it all together:
The 13 Keys still predict Biden to win
The polls favor Trump,
but are statistically tied
538’s forecast hasn’t been updated since the debate so it’s not relevant
IEM continues to predict a democratic win
PredictIt
favors Trump and GOP victories, but doesn’t support Biden replacement
The 13 Keys and IEM have the best predictive track records and they both still favor Biden
and the democrats.
The debates are only one of many events that will occur during the campaign. Just as Trump’s felony conviction didn’t end his chances,
Biden’s poor debate performance is unlikely to end his.
The political experts calling for Biden to step down were premature as well as uninformed. According to the data, this
race is far from over.