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    • In the last two days, six new polls of Ohio voters have been released, five of which favor President Barack Obama, by leads of 6 points, 4 points, 4 points, 3 points and 2 points. The last reports a tie, from right-leaning Rasmussen, which gave former Gov. Mitt Romney a 2-point advantage last week. Obama now has a 3.1 percentage point lead in Pollster's average for Ohio and a 2.9 percentage point lead in the RealClearPolitics average for Ohio.

      A 3 percentage point lead is hardly an insurmountable margin for Obama. But it has been so consistent over the past several weeks that Romney ought to be hoping that the polls favor Obama on a systematic basis by overestimating the turnout of respondents with demographics that favor him. This is certainly possible, but it would mean that many different polling institutions are making similar mistakes. The outcome of Ohio, then, will be as much a referendum on the art of polling as it will be on the art of the presidency.

      Sources: Betfair, Intrade, IEM, HuffPost Pollster and RealClearPolitics

      Read More »from Romney camp hoping for a systematic polling bias in Ohio
    • When the Redskins meet the Panthers at FedExField this Sunday, more will be on the line than a mitigation of Washington's 3-5 record. As commentators are certain to remind viewers, the result of Washington's last home game before a presidential election has the eerie ability to predict the outcome of said election. If the Redskins win, the incumbent wins; if the Redskins lose, the incumbent loses.

      This is true in 17 of the past 18 elections. But as I pointed out in September, there is no reason this predictive wizardry should be the exclusive privilege of Washington's team. In fact, one can gin up such a rule for any team.

      We now have results for 28 of the 31 rules I proposed for the other NFL franchises. Of those, 18 point to a Romney win and 10 point to an Obama win--meaning Romney has the NFL's zero electoral votes all locked up. Three more rules are set to be adjudicated this weekend, and the last is, somewhat strangely, not occurring until after the election--a paradox that threatens to sink the whole concept that football games can predict electoral events.

      Read More »from NFL trends point to Romney win, but Redskins Rule still to be decided
    • As we've mentioned a few times before, examining which links people click on when they search for topics in the news tells us a lot about what people of different political stripes find interesting. By filtering down to search queries that reliably lead to publications with a documented political slant, we can quickly expose the conspiratorial fringe of political news.

      Our friends at Yahoo! Labs Barcelona have now expanded this process into a visualization that divides these partisan searches by subject. The size of the bubbles is proportional to the percentage of all search trends for one side or the other devoted to the given topic area. It is powered by Political Search Trends, a tool that is the output of collaboration between Yahoo! Labs Barcelona and the University of Amsterdam's Digital Methods Initiative.

      If you're dubious about whether this method of sorting news items works, just look at the proportions. Left-leaning sites dominate the search results for "Taxes & Spending," thanks largely to discussion of former Gov. Mitt Romney's unreleased tax returns, while right-leaning sites are more concerned with health care, one of the main lines of attack on President Barack Obama.

      Mouse over any pair of bubbles to see the associated search terms.

      Read More »from What we search about when we search about politics: An interactive exploration
    • Since the final presidential debate, 15 polls have surveyed voter opinion in Ohio, the state that is more likely than any other to determine the election. President Barack Obama leads former Gov. Mitt Romney in 13 of them. The candidates tied in one, and Romney leads in one. Those last two polls were both conducted by Rasmussen, one of the more right-leaning polling institutions, as FiveThirtyEight's Nate Silver has documented.

      No one is saying Ohio is a walk for the president. The Huffington Post's Pollster and the RealClearPolitics average both have Obama leading with 51.2 percent among those who express a preference for either major candidate. There is still time for a shift toward Romney, and it's always possible that there is a systematic bias in the polls.

      But I don't think it's likely. Historically, polls have been pretty accurate this close to the election. Based only on these surveys, the Signal gives Obama a 75 percent chance of victory in Ohio. When we factor in prediction markets, that figure ticks up a small amount, to 77 percent.

      Read More »from All eyes on—where else?—Ohio
    • Last year, the Signal noticed an eerie correspondence between the highs and lows of the S&P; 500 stock market index and the ups and downs of President Barack Obama's odds of winning re-election in the prediction markets. Almost a year later, the two data sets continue to move in remarkable lockstep.

      S&P and Obama reelection odds

      As thorny correlation issues go, this one is particularly interesting because the phantom hand of causation could move in either direction (or in neither, of course). Consider these various interpretations:

      Scenario A: Happy investors lead directly to positive sentiment for the incumbent president. In fact, Matt Lampert, a research fellow at the Socionomics Institute, pointed me to a 1999 study by pioneering market psychologist Robert Prechter (and one-time co-contributor of mine) investigating how soaring markets favor sitting presidents, an observation that Lampert says goes "all the way back to George Washington." Prediction market traders who subscribe to Scenario A will bid up shares for Obama during a bull run in stocks.

      Scenario B: Both signals are a factor of the same force: the greater economy. An improving economy simultaneously bolsters both the profits of companies and the prospects for Obama.

      Scenario C: Elections don't follow stocks; stocks follow elections. The next president may cut capital gains taxes, reduce tax credits for oil companies or impose tighter regulations on banks. The next president may toss the solar industry money to burn, or choke off support for wind power. From media consolidation to antitrust policies, the party in the White House makes a difference for individual companies and corporate America overall.

      The truth is, all three scenarios coexist. Scenario B may be the strongest, but Scenario C is especially intriguing because it would give us clear and direct information about how investors view and react to White House policy.

      But can we disentangle all these forces and isolate exactly how much America's choice on Nov. 6 will affect the stock market? Sure, but it would require running an experiment that only an economist could love. To do so, we would need to abolish the election entirely and institute a coin flip instead: Heads, former Gov. Mitt Romney is president, tails, Obama keeps his job.

      Under this crazy proposal, the instant reaction of Wall Street after the outcome of the ultimate coin flip (Heads? Buy Exxon Mobil.) could be attributed precisely to the identity of the commander in chief and not any other confounding factor. It's the same principle of randomized trials that we use to evaluate pharmaceutical drugs.

      Such an experiment is scientifically valid, but I'm guessing you're not wild about it.

      Read More »from ‘It’s the president, stupid’: Elections drive the economy, too

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    About The Signal

    The Signal is the Yahoo! News predictions blog featuring real-time forecasts and sentiment on politics, economics, and more. MEET THE TEAM: David Pennock, David Rothschild

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