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Election prediction system From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Keys to the White House is a prediction system for determining the outcome of presidential elections in the United States. It was developed by American historian Allan Lichtman and Russian geophysicist Vladimir Keilis-Borok in 1981, adapting prediction methods that Keilis-Borok designed for earthquake prediction.
The system is a thirteen-point checklist that assesses the situation of the United States and political system ahead of a presidential election: when five or fewer items on the checklist are false, the incumbent party nominee is predicted to win the election, but when six or more items on the checklist are false, the challenging party nominee is predicted to win.[1][2][3]
Some of the items on the checklist involve qualitative judgment, and therefore the system relies heavily on the knowledge and analytical skill of whoever attempts to apply it. Using the system, Lichtman has correctly predicted the popular vote outcomes of each presidential election from 1984 to 2012. Though Lichtman claims he called the 2016 election correctly based on the 13 keys, his 2016 book and paper stated that the keys only referred to the popular vote, which Donald Trump lost.[4][5][6][7] He switched to just predicting the winner across all publications after the 2016 election, stating recent demographics changes give Democrats an advantage in the popular vote in close elections, and correctly called the outcome of the 2020 election.[8][9]
Lichtman argues that the system’s reliability proves that American voters select their next president according to how well the country was governed in the preceding four years and that election campaigns have little, if any, meaningful effect on American voters. If American voters are satisfied with the governance of the country, they will re-elect the president or elect their party's nominee, but if they are dissatisfied, they will transfer the presidency to the challenging party.[10][11]
While attending a dinner party at Caltech in 1981, Allan Lichtman met Vladimir Keilis-Borok, a leading Russian geophysicist. Both men were Fairchild Scholars at Caltech.[12] Keilis-Borok was interested in applying his prediction techniques to democratic political systems. This was not possible for him to do within the Soviet Union, which was a single-party autocracy, and a guest at the party referred him to Lichtman. Lichtman attracted Keilis-Borok's interest because he was a quantitative historian who mathematically analyzed trends in American history. Lichtman agreed to help Keilis-Borok apply his prediction techniques to American presidential elections.[13]
Lichtman and Keilis-Borok examined data collated from every presidential election from 1860 to 1980 to identify factors that seemed predictive of election outcomes. From his own studies of American presidential elections, Lichtman had come to the conclusion that voters are in fact not swayed by election campaigns and instead vote according to how well the president has performed in office. Lichtman also noticed that even if the president did not seek re-election, his successes and failures would help or hinder the prospects of the nominee of his party: these insights shaped how he and Keilis-Borok conducted their research.[14]
Lichtman and Keilis-Borok published their prediction model in a 1981 paper: at this stage, their system had 12 keys, including keys that considered the number of terms the incumbent party had held the presidency, and if the incumbent party had won a popular vote majority in the previous election. Another four keys were ultimately cut that considered political ideology, the dominant party of the era, if there was a serious contest for the challenging party nomination, and if the country was in wartime or peacetime.[15][16]
The system was later modified to 13 keys, with the tenure key and the popular vote majority key both replaced by the party mandate key and the foreign/military failure and success keys being added.
Some of the keys are objective, such as economic growth, while some are subjective, such as candidate charisma.[17]
The system consists of 13 true/false statements pertaining to circumstances surrounding a presidential election. If five or fewer keys are false, the incumbent party is predicted to win the election. If six or more are false, the incumbent party is predicted to lose.[18]
# | Name | Description[18] |
---|---|---|
1 | Party mandate | After the midterm elections, the incumbent party holds more seats in the U.S. House of Representatives than after the previous midterm elections. |
2 | No primary contest | There is no serious contest for the incumbent party nomination. |
3 | Incumbent seeking re-election | The incumbent party candidate is the sitting president. |
4 | No third party | There is no significant third party or independent campaign. |
5 | Strong short-term economy | The economy is not in recession during the election campaign. |
6 | Strong long-term economy | Real per capita economic growth during the term equals or exceeds mean growth during the previous two terms. |
7 | Major policy change | The incumbent administration effects major changes in national policy. |
8 | No social unrest | There is no sustained social unrest during the term. |
9 | No scandal | The incumbent administration is untainted by major scandal. |
10 | No foreign or military failure | The incumbent administration suffers no major failure in foreign or military affairs. |
11 | Major foreign or military success | The incumbent administration achieves a major success in foreign or military affairs. |
12 | Charismatic incumbent | The incumbent party candidate is charismatic or a national hero. |
13 | Uncharismatic challenger | The challenging party candidate is not charismatic or a national hero. |
Key 1 (party mandate) is turned true if the incumbent party has achieved a net gain of seats in the U.S. House of Representatives in the previous presidential and midterm elections combined. For example, Lichtman refers to the 1982 U.S. House elections in the middle of Ronald Reagan's first term when the Republicans lost 27 seats: as the Republicans had gained 35 seats in 1980, this left them with a net gain of eight seats, turning the key true.
Lichtman says that midterm elections reflect the performance of the incumbent party and are an indicator of nationwide electoral trends. Additionally, if the incumbent party performs poorly, a large loss of House seats can also affect the president's ability to enact policy, which can result in other keys turning false.
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won the popular vote on 12 of the 14 occasions when it achieved a net gain of seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, compared to the previous midterm elections, losing the Electoral College in 2000, with the exceptions being in 1860 and 1952. The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on 14 of the 27 occasions that key 1 was false, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888 and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1872, 1900, 1916, 1924, 1940, 1944, 1948, 1964, 1972, 1996 and 2012. [19]
Key 2 (no primary contest) is turned true if the incumbent party nominee wins at least two-thirds of the total delegate vote on the first ballot at the nominating convention, with no deep and vocal party divisions.
Lichtman says the incumbent party's ability to unite behind a consensus nominee is reflective of successful governance, whereas a contested nomination is indicative of internal party strife caused by weak governance.
Notable primary contests that turned the key false occurred in 1860 (the Democrats split between Northern Democrats and Southern Democrats over slavery, with two conventions and 59 ballots being required to nominate Stephen A. Douglas), 1896 (due to a dispute between the Bourbon wing of the Democrats led by sitting president Grover Cleveland and the populist wing of the Democrats led by William Jennings Bryan, the convention required five ballots to nominate Bryan), 1912 (the Republicans split between the conservatives of President William Howard Taft and the progressives of former President Theodore Roosevelt, with Taft being nominated for re-election on the first ballot of the convention with only 52% of the delegate vote after progressives walked out), and in 1968 (there were deep and vocal divisions within the Democrats over the Vietnam War, including strong opposition by the anti-Vietnam War wing of the Democrats to the nomination of Vice President Hubert Humphrey).
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party won the popular vote on 23 of the 28 occasions when key 2 was true, losing the Electoral College in 1888 and 2000, with the exceptions being in 1932, 1960, 1992, 2008 and 2020. The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on 11 of the 13 occasions that key 2 was false, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exception being in 1880. Of the 13 keys, Lichtman has said that this key is the single best predictor of an election outcome.
Conversely, a serious contest for the challenging party's nomination does not harm its nominee's election prospects, as a weak incumbent party often results in a crowded challenging party primary field in anticipation of a winnable general election.[20][21] Landslide challenging party popular vote victories coming after a serious contest for the party's nomination include those of Republican Abraham Lincoln in 1860 (10.13 points), Democrat Woodrow Wilson in 1912 (18.67 points), Republican Warren G. Harding in 1920 (26.17 points), and Democrat Franklin D. Roosevelt in 1932 (17.76 points).[22][23]
Lichtman says an incumbent president seeking re-election has several advantages, such as the ability to set the national agenda, and will often attract much more media attention than a non-incumbent. The president can also benefit from the rally 'round the flag effect in times of crisis.
Lichtman also says that presidents running for re-election will rarely face the strongest candidates from the challenging party, as they typically refrain from running unless the president is seen as very vulnerable.
As of the 2020 election, when there was an incumbent president running for re-election and key 3 was true, the president won the popular vote on 18 of 25 occasions, losing the Electoral College in 1888. Of the 16 open seat elections (when key 3 was false), the incumbent party lost the popular vote on nine occasions, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 2000 and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1868, 1880, 1908, 1928 and 1988.
The incumbency key also correlates with key 2 (no primary contest), as it usually guarantees there will be no serious contest for the incumbent party's nomination. As of the 2020 election, when the president was running for re-election and faced no serious contest for their party's nomination, thus turning key 2 true, the president won the popular vote on 18 of 21 occasions, losing the Electoral College in 1888, with the exceptions being in 1932, 1992 and 2020.
If there is a serious primary contest to the president, it signifies major discontent within their own party and thus the broader electorate. On all four occasions when the president was running for re-election and key 2 was turned false, in 1892, 1912, 1976 and 1980, the president was defeated.[19]
Key 4 (no third party) is turned false if there is a major candidate other than the nominees of the Democrats and the Republicans.
American presidential elections since 1860 have largely been de facto binary contests between Democrats and Republicans, as no third party candidate has come close to winning.[24] Lichtman says that if a third party candidate is unusually popular, it signals major discontent with the performance of the incumbent party and counts against them: he defines third parties as either perennial (having small and loyal constituencies) or insurgent (rising in response to particular circumstances).[24]
Retrospectively, the key was turned false if a single third party candidate won 5% or more of the national popular vote or there was a significant split in the incumbent party: for example, in 1948, Henry A. Wallace and Strom Thurmond both split from the Democrats and ran notable insurgent campaigns, turning the key false for President Harry S. Truman despite no third party candidate winning 5% of the popular vote.
For upcoming elections, key 4 is turned false if a single third party candidate consistently polls at 10% or more, indicating they are likely to receive 5% or more of the national popular vote: third party candidates typically underperform their polling by around half, with Lichtman saying they tend to fade in the voting booth as voters focus on the major party candidates.[25] Key 4 is the only key that concerns any polling of candidates.[26]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has been defeated on six of the nine occasions when there has been a significant third party candidate, with the exceptions being in 1924, 1948 and 1996. The incumbent party has won the popular vote on 22 of the 32 occasions that key 4 was true, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000 and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1884, 1896, 1920, 1932, 1952, 1960, 1976, 2008 and 2020.[19]
Key 5 (strong short-term economy) is turned false if the economy is, or is widely perceived to be, in recession during the election campaign.
Lichtman cites the early 1990s recession as an example: the recession ended in March 1991, but a Gallup poll in September 1992 found that 79% of respondents believed the economy was still in recession, turning the key false for George H. W. Bush.
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won the popular vote on 25 of the 31 occasions that key 5 was true, losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000 and 2016, with the exceptions being in 1860, 1892, 1912, 1952, 1968 and 1976. The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on all ten occasions that the economy was, or was widely perceived to be, in recession during the election campaign, only winning the Electoral College in 1876.
Key 6 (strong long-term economy) is turned true if the real per capita economic growth during the term equals or exceeds the mean growth during the previous two terms: Lichtman states that slow economic growth is indicative of an administration's lack of strength.
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won the popular vote on 17 of the 22 occasions that key 6 was true, losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000 and 2016, with the exceptions being in 1860, 1892, 1912, 1968 and 1980). The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on 11 of the 19 occasions that key 6 was false, winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1864, 1908, 1916, 1948, 1972, 1984, 2004 and 2012.
The incumbent party has won the popular vote on 17 of the 21 occasions when both economy keys were true, losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000 and 2016, with the exceptions being in 1860, 1892, 1912 and 1968. On all nine occasions when both economy keys were false, the incumbent party lost the popular vote, only winning the Electoral College in 1876.[19]
Key 7 (major policy change) is turned true if the incumbent administration redirects the course of government or enacts a major policy change that has broad effects on the country's commerce, welfare or outlook: it does not matter whether the change is popular with the public, nor does it matter what ideological mold it was cast from. Abraham Lincoln abolishing slavery, Franklin D. Roosevelt enacting the New Deal, and Barack Obama enacting the Affordable Care Act were policy changes that turned the key true.[18]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won re-election on 15 of the 19 occasions that key 7 was true, with the exceptions being in 1892, 1920, 1968 and 2020. The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on 12 of the 22 occasions that key 7 was false, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000 and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1872, 1928, 1956, 1972, 1988, 1996 and 2004.
This key often correlates with other keys: for example, Herbert Hoover's failure to take vigorous action during the Great Depression prolonged the Depression, which in turn led to widespread social unrest, Hoover's Republicans having a large loss of House seats in the midterm elections, and the nomination of a charismatic challenger in Franklin D. Roosevelt.[27]
Key 8 (no social unrest) is turned false if there is widespread violent unrest that is sustained or leaves critical issues unresolved by the time of the election campaign, making the voters call into serious question the stability of the country.
The American Civil War, the racial and anti-Vietnam War protests of 1968, and the protests of 2020 triggered by the murder of George Floyd were incidents of unrest that were sufficiently serious and widespread to turn the key false. By contrast, the Great Railroad Strike of 1877, the 1980 Miami race riots and the 1992 Los Angeles riots were too localized to turn the key false.[27]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has lost the popular vote on seven of the 11 occasions that there was sustained social unrest during the term, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888, with the exceptions being in 1864, 1868 and 1872. The incumbent party has won the popular vote on 21 of the 30 occasions that key 8 was true, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 2000 and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1884, 1912, 1952, 1960, 1976, 1980, 1992 and 2008.
Key 9 (no scandal) is turned false if there is bipartisan recognition of serious impropriety that is directly linked to the president, such as widespread corruption in the Cabinet and/or officials of an incumbent administration, or presidential misconduct resulting in a bipartisan impeachment.
By contrast, the voters ignore allegations of wrongdoing that appear to be the product of partisan politicking or are not directly linked to the president: for example, the impeachment of Andrew Johnson in 1868 and the Iran-Contra affair during Ronald Reagan's second term did not turn the key false.
While the Watergate scandal began during Republican President Richard Nixon's first term, it did not affect Nixon's re-election bid in 1972 since the voters believed at the time that it was political point-scoring by the Democrats. After Nixon's re-election, new information came to light that implicated him in the scandal and raised concerns among Republicans, turning the key false: the scandal ultimately resulted in Nixon's resignation, and contributed to the Republicans' defeat in 1976.[28]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has lost the popular vote on four of the six occasions that the incumbent administration was tainted by major scandal, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 2000 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exception being in 1924. The incumbent party has won the popular vote on 23 of the 35 occasions that key 9 was true, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888 and 2016, with the exceptions being in 1860, 1884, 1892, 1896, 1912, 1920, 1932, 1960, 1968, 1980, 1992 and 2008.
Key 10 (no foreign or military failure) is turned false if a failure occurs that is perceived to undermine the standing of the United States and/or erode trust in the president's leadership. Lichtman cites the attack on Pearl Harbor under Franklin D. Roosevelt, the botched Bay of Pigs invasion under John F. Kennedy, North Vietnamese victory in the Vietnam War under Gerald Ford, and the Iranian hostage crisis under Jimmy Carter as failures that turned the key false. By contrast, failed diplomatic initiatives, such as Dwight D. Eisenhower's failure to negotiate a nuclear test ban treaty with the Soviet Union, will not turn the key false.
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has been defeated on seven of the 11 occasions that the incumbent administration suffered a major failure in foreign or military affairs, with the exceptions being in 1944, 1948, 1964 and 2004. The incumbent party has won the popular vote on 21 of the 30 occasions that key 10 was true, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000, and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1860, 1884, 1892, 1896, 1912, 1932, 1992 and 2020.
Key 11 (major foreign or military success) is turned true if an achievement is seen as improving the prestige and interests of the United States. Lichtman cites the formation of NATO under Harry S. Truman, Dwight D. Eisenhower negotiating an armistice to the Korean War, John F. Kennedy's handling of the Cuban Missile Crisis, and the killing of Osama bin Laden under Barack Obama as successes that turned the key true.[19]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won re-election on 17 of the 21 occasions when it achieved a major success in foreign or military affairs, with the exceptions being in 1920, 1952, 1980 and 1992. The incumbent party has lost the popular vote on 12 of the 20 occasions that key 11 was false, winning the popular vote but losing the Electoral College in 1888, 2000, and 2016 and winning the Electoral College in 1876, with the exceptions being in 1880, 1936, 1940, 1984 and 1996.
The incumbent party has won re-election on 13 of the 14 occasions that both foreign and military affairs keys were true, with the exception being in 1992. On all four occasions that both foreign and military affairs keys were false, in 1960, 1968, 1976 and 2008, the incumbent party was defeated.
Key 12 (charismatic incumbent) is turned true if the incumbent party candidate is charismatic or a national hero, while key 13 (uncharismatic challenger) is turned false if the challenging party candidate is charismatic or a national hero. Key 13 is the only key that pertains to the challenging party.
Lichtman defines a charismatic candidate as one with an extraordinarily persuasive or dynamic personality that gives him or her broad appeal that extends to voters outside their party's base. Having studied the political careers of all historical presidential candidates, Lichtman found that James G. Blaine, William Jennings Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt, Franklin D. Roosevelt, John F. Kennedy, Ronald Reagan and Barack Obama had charisma that was exceptional enough to make a measurable difference in their political fortunes. By contrast, Lichtman found that while Donald Trump had an intense appeal, it was with only a narrow slice of the electorate, as opposed to the broad appeal that Ronald Reagan had with traditionally Democratic voters.[29]
Lichtman has said that it is possible for candidates to lose their charismatic status: William Jennings Bryan was seen as charismatic and inspirational in 1896 and 1900, but his voter appeal had faded and he had become the subject of frequent press ridicule in 1908, while Barack Obama exuded charisma in 2008 but failed to have the same success in connecting with the voters in 2012.
Lichtman defines a candidate as a national hero if they are seen by the public as having played a critical role in the success of a national endeavor: he found that Ulysses S. Grant and Dwight D. Eisenhower were seen as national heroes, as both were great war leaders instrumental to major American victories.[30] By contrast, he said that while many Americans admired John McCain for his military service, he was not seen as a national hero because he had not led the country through war.[31]
As of the 2020 election, the incumbent party has won re-election on eight of the ten occasions that key 12 was true, with the exceptions being in 1884 and 1896. The incumbent party has been defeated on five of the six occasions that key 13 was false, with the exception being in 1900.
While developing the keys, Lichtman retrospectively applied them to every American presidential election from 1860 to 1980.
Republican President Theodore Roosevelt's election in 1904 is the only occasion where all 13 keys were true for the incumbent party. The elections of 1876, 1960 and 2008 - an election the keys predicted prospectively - all had nine false keys against the incumbent party, which was the Republicans on all three occasions.
In 29 of the 31 elections, the keys corresponded with the elected president.[32] The exceptions were:
Election | Incumbent party nominee | Challenger party nominee | Party mandate | No primary contest | Incumbent seeking re-election | No third party | Strong short-term economy | Strong long-term economy | Major policy change | No social unrest | No scandal | No foreign or military failure | Major foreign or military success | Charismatic incumbent | Uncharismatic challenger | False keys | Presumed winner | Actual winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1860 | Stephen A. Douglas
(Democratic) |
Abraham Lincoln
(Republican) |
True | False[lower-alpha 1] | False | False[lower-alpha 2] | True | True | False | False[lower-alpha 3] | True | True | False | False | True[lower-alpha 4] | 7 | Abraham Lincoln | |
1864 | Abraham Lincoln
(Union/Republican) |
George McClellan
(Democratic) |
True[lower-alpha 5] | True | True | True | True | False | True[lower-alpha 6] | False[lower-alpha 7] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 8] | False | True | 3 | Abraham Lincoln | |
1868[lower-alpha 9] | Ulysses S. Grant
(Republican) |
Horatio Seymour
(Democratic) |
True | True | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 10] | False[lower-alpha 11] | True[lower-alpha 12] | True | True[lower-alpha 13] | True | True | 2 | Ulysses S. Grant | |
1868[lower-alpha 14] | Horatio Seymour
(Democratic) |
Ulysses S. Grant
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 15] | False | False | 6 | |||||||||||
1872 | Ulysses S. Grant
(Republican) |
Horace Greeley
(Democrat/Liberal) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | False | False[lower-alpha 16] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 17] | True | True | 3 | Ulysses S. Grant | |
1876 | Rutherford B. Hayes
(Republican) |
Samuel J. Tilden
(Democratic) |
False | False[lower-alpha 18] | False | True | False[lower-alpha 19] | False | False | True | False[lower-alpha 20] | True | False | False | True | 9 | Samuel J. Tilden[lower-alpha 21] | Rutherford B. Hayes |
1880 | James A. Garfield
(Republican) |
Winfield Scott Hancock
(Democratic) |
True | False[lower-alpha 22] | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 23] | True | True | True | False | False | True | 4 | James A. Garfield | |
1884 | James G. Blaine
(Republican) |
Grover Cleveland
(Democratic) |
False | False[lower-alpha 24] | False | True | False[lower-alpha 25] | False | False | True | True | True | False | True | True | 7 | Grover Cleveland | |
1888 | Grover Cleveland
(Democratic) |
Benjamin Harrison
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | False | False[lower-alpha 26] | True | True | False | False | True | 5 | Grover Cleveland[lower-alpha 27] | Benjamin Harrison |
1892 | Benjamin Harrison
(Republican) |
Grover Cleveland
(Democratic) |
False | False[lower-alpha 28] | True | False[lower-alpha 29] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 30] | False[lower-alpha 31] | True | True | False | False | True | 6 | Grover Cleveland | |
1896 | William Jennings Bryan
(Democratic) |
William McKinley
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 32] | False | True | False[lower-alpha 33] | False | False | False[lower-alpha 34] | True | True | False | True | True | 8 | William McKinley | |
1900 | William McKinley
(Republican) |
William Jennings Bryan
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 35] | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 36] | False | False | 3 | William McKinley | |
1904 | Theodore Roosevelt
(Republican) |
Alton Brooks Parker
(Democratic) |
True | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 37] | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 38] | True | True | 0 | Theodore Roosevelt | |
1908 | William Howard Taft
(Republican) |
William Jennings Bryan
(Democratic) |
True | True | False | True | True[lower-alpha 39] | False | True[lower-alpha 40] | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 41] | False | True[lower-alpha 42] | 3 | William Howard Taft | |
1912 | William Howard Taft
(Republican) |
Woodrow Wilson
(Democratic) |
False | False[lower-alpha 43] | True | False[lower-alpha 44] | True | True | False | True | True | True | False | False | True | 6 | Woodrow Wilson[lower-alpha 45] | |
1916 | Woodrow Wilson
(Democratic) |
Charles Evans Hughes
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | False | True[lower-alpha 46] | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 47] | False | True | 3 | Woodrow Wilson | |
1920 | James M. Cox
(Democratic) |
Warren G. Harding
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 48] | False | True | False[lower-alpha 49] | False | True[lower-alpha 50] | False[lower-alpha 51] | True | False[lower-alpha 52] | True[lower-alpha 53] | False | True | 8 | Warren G. Harding | |
1924 | Calvin Coolidge
(Republican) |
John W. Davis
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 54] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 55] | True | False[lower-alpha 56] | True | True[lower-alpha 57] | False | True | 4 | Calvin Coolidge | |
1928 | Herbert Hoover
(Republican) |
Al Smith
(Democratic) |
True | True | False | True | True | True | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 58] | False | True | 3 | Herbert Hoover | |
1932 | Herbert Hoover
(Republican) |
Franklin D. Roosevelt
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | True | False[lower-alpha 59] | False | False | False[lower-alpha 60] | True | True | False | False | False | 8 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | |
1936 | Franklin D. Roosevelt
(Democratic) |
Alf Landon
(Republican) |
True | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 61] | True | True | True | False | True | True | 1 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | |
1940 | Franklin D. Roosevelt
(Democratic) |
Wendell Willkie
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 62] | True | True | True | False | True | True | 2 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | |
1944 | Franklin D. Roosevelt
(Democratic) |
Thomas Dewey
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 63] | True | True | False[lower-alpha 64] | True[lower-alpha 65] | True | True | 2 | Franklin D. Roosevelt | |
1948 | Harry S. Truman
(Democratic) |
Thomas Dewey
(Republican) |
False | True[lower-alpha 66] | True | False[lower-alpha 67] | True | False | True[lower-alpha 68] | True | True | False[lower-alpha 69] | True[lower-alpha 70] | False | True | 5 | Harry S. Truman | |
1952 | Adlai Stevenson II
(Democratic) |
Dwight D. Eisenhower
(Republican) |
True | False[lower-alpha 71] | False | True | True | False | False | True | False[lower-alpha 72] | False[lower-alpha 73] | True[lower-alpha 74] | False | False | 8 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | |
1956 | Dwight D. Eisenhower
(Republican) |
Adlai Stevenson II
(Democratic) |
True | True | True | True | True | True | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 75] | True | True | 1 | Dwight D. Eisenhower | |
1960 | Richard Nixon
(Republican) |
John F. Kennedy
(Democratic) |
False | True | False | True | False[lower-alpha 76] | False | False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 77] | False | False | False | 9 | John F. Kennedy[lower-alpha 78] | |
1964 | Lyndon B. Johnson
(Democratic) |
Barry Goldwater
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 79] | True | True | False[lower-alpha 80] | True[lower-alpha 81] | False | True | 3 | Lyndon B. Johnson | |
1968 | Hubert Humphrey
(Democratic) |
Richard Nixon
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 82] | False | False[lower-alpha 83] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 84] | False[lower-alpha 85] | True | False[lower-alpha 86] | False | False | True | 8 | Richard Nixon | |
1972 | Richard Nixon
(Republican) |
George McGovern
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 87] | False | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 88] | False | True | 4 | Richard Nixon | |
1976 | Gerald Ford
(Republican) |
Jimmy Carter
(Democratic) |
False | False[lower-alpha 89] | True | True | True[lower-alpha 90] | False | False | True | False[lower-alpha 91] | False[lower-alpha 92] | False | False | True | 8 | Jimmy Carter | |
1980 | Jimmy Carter
(Democratic) |
Ronald Reagan
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 93] | True | False[lower-alpha 94] | False[lower-alpha 95] | True | False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 96] | True[lower-alpha 97] | False | False | 8 | Ronald Reagan |
Using the 13 keys, Lichtman has correctly predicted the popular vote outcomes of nine of the ten presidential elections from 1984 to 2020.
In November 1999, he predicted that Vice President Al Gore, the Democratic frontrunner, would be elected president in 2000.[35] Gore won the national popular vote but Republican nominee George W. Bush won the Electoral College and was elected president. Lichtman argued that in 2000 he specifically predicted the winner of the popular vote, which Gore won.[36]
In his 1988 book The Thirteen Keys to the Presidency, Lichtman had defined his model as predicting the outcome of the popular vote,[37] but he did not remind readers of this nuance in his journal articles wherein he made his prediction for 2000;[38][35] he simply predicted that Gore would win. Lichtman further argues that Gore was the rightful winner of the 2000 election, and lost because of improper ballot counting in Florida.[39]
In 2016, Lichtman predicted a Trump victory using the keys. However, Trump lost the popular vote, and Lichtman had previously clarified that the keys only predicted the popular vote, not the Electoral College outcome. Lichtman claims that in 2016, he switched to predicting the outcome of the Electoral College,[40] but this claim is not supported by his books and papers from 2016, which explicitly stated that the keys predict the popular vote.[7][41]
Lichtman has inconsistently claimed that he began predicting the outcome of the Electoral College rather than the popular vote after 2000 or in 2016, explaining that the discrepancies between the Electoral College and the popular vote had dramatically increased, with Democrats holding a significant advantage in winning the popular vote, but having no such advantage in the Electoral College.[6]
Election | Incumbent party nominee | Challenger party nominee | Party mandate | No primary contest | Incumbent seeking re-election | No third party | Strong short-term economy | Strong long-term economy | Major policy change | No social unrest | No scandal | No foreign or military failure | Major foreign or military success | Charismatic incumbent | Uncharismatic challenger | False keys | Predicted winner | Actual winner |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1984 | Ronald Reagan
(Republican) |
Walter Mondale
(Democratic) |
True | True | True | True | True | False | True[lower-alpha 98] | True | True | True | False | True | True | 2 | Ronald Reagan | |
1988 | George H. W. Bush
(Republican) |
Michael Dukakis
(Democratic) |
True | True[lower-alpha 99] | False | True | True | True | False | True | True[lower-alpha 100] | True | True[lower-alpha 101] | False | True | 3 | George H. W. Bush | |
1992 | George H. W. Bush
(Republican) |
Bill Clinton
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 102] | False[lower-alpha 103] | False | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 104] | False | True[lower-alpha 105] | 6 | Bill Clinton | |
1996 | Bill Clinton
(Democratic) |
Bob Dole
(Republican) |
False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 106] | True | True | False | True | True | True | False | False | True | 5 | Bill Clinton | |
2000 | Al Gore
(Democratic) |
George W. Bush
(Republican) |
True | True | False | True | True | True | False | True | False[lower-alpha 107] | True | False | False | True | 5 | Al Gore[lower-alpha 108] | George W. Bush |
2004 | George W. Bush
(Republican) |
John Kerry
(Democratic) |
True | True | True | True | True | False | False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 109] | True[lower-alpha 110] | False | True | 4 | George W. Bush | |
2008 | John McCain
(Republican) |
Barack Obama
(Democratic) |
False | True[lower-alpha 111] | False | True | False[lower-alpha 112] | False | False | True | True | False[lower-alpha 113] | False | False | False | 9 | Barack Obama | |
2012 | Barack Obama
(Democratic) |
Mitt Romney
(Republican) |
False | True | True | True | True | False | True[lower-alpha 114] | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 115] | False[lower-alpha 116] | True | 3 | Barack Obama | |
2016 | Hillary Clinton
(Democratic) |
Donald Trump
(Republican) |
False | False[lower-alpha 117] | False | True[lower-alpha 118] | True | True | False | True | True | True | False | False | True[lower-alpha 119] | 6[lower-alpha 120] | Donald Trump[lower-alpha 121][7][47] | |
2020 | Donald Trump
(Republican) |
Joe Biden
(Democratic) |
False | True | True | True | False[lower-alpha 122] | False | True[lower-alpha 123] | False[lower-alpha 124] | False[lower-alpha 125] | True | False | False | True | 7 | Joe Biden[48] | |
2024 | Kamala Harris
(Democratic) |
Donald Trump
(Republican) |
False | True | False | True | True | True | True[lower-alpha 126] | True | True | Likely False[lower-alpha 127][49] | Likely True[lower-alpha 128][50] | False | True | Likely 4 | Kamala Harris[51] | TBD |
Lichtman's model received significant media coverage in July 2010 after he released his forecast for the 2012 election, predicting that Barack Obama would win re-election.[52][53]
Lichtman again received considerable media attention for being one of the few forecasters to correctly predict Donald Trump's victory in the 2016 election, despite his model only predicting the popular vote:[4][5] this has been the subject of criticism, both at Lichtman's and the media's expense.[54][55][56] Following the election, Trump sent Lichtman a framed copy of his prediction in The Washington Post signed with the message, "Professor - congrats, good call."[57]
Lichtman's model has received significant criticism from political scientists, journalists, and commentators.[47] James E. Campbell, a professor of politcial science at the University at Buffalo, criticized the keys for their subjectivity, noting that they are often judged "in the eye of the beholder."[47]
Lars Emerson and Michael Lovito, two reporters and alumni of American University, where Lichtman teaches, criticized the predictive record of the keys, noting that Lichtman claimed credit for predicting the outcome in 2016, despite predicting a Donald Trump popular vote victory.[47][6] They suggested that the keys are no more accurate than the polls, noting that "[i]f you took whoever led in the polls from every election from 1984 to 2020 and predicted they would win, you would have predicted 9/10 elections correctly, which is the exact same record Lichtman can claim."[47] Julia Azari, a professor at Marquette University, believes the keys are useful as a starting point for assessment of the race, but that they do not constitute a "model."[47] Lichtman has vigorously defended against these assertions.[47]
Statistician Nate Silver of FiveThirtyEight criticized the subjectivity of several keys, particularly candidate charisma, and said several more keys chosen for the system, such as long term economic growth, could be seen as data dredging and overfitting. Silver said that "[i]t’s less that he has discovered the right set of keys than that he’s a locksmith and can keep minting new keys until he happens to open all 38 doors", and also criticized only two of the keys being based on economic factors, despite the economy being a main concern of a majority of voters.
Silver stated that while the system has accurately predicted the winner, the margin of victory or defeat for parties that had the same number of false keys has varied widely. For example, the elections of 1880, 1924, 1972 and 2004 all had four false keys against the incumbent party, giving a predicted winning margin of 6.45 points, whereas these elections were won by respective margins of 0.09 points (1880), 25.22 points (1924), 23.15 points (1972), and 2.46 points (2004).
Conversely, the election of 1960 had an equal-record nine false keys against the incumbent Republicans, giving a predicted losing margin of 11 points - a landslide defeat - whereas Republican nominee Vice President Richard Nixon lost by 0.17 points to Democratic nominee John F. Kennedy.[58]
Also cited by Silver was the election of 1932, which had eight false keys against the incumbent Republicans, giving a predicted losing margin of 7.51 points, whereas President Herbert Hoover lost by 17.76 points in a landslide defeat to Democratic nominee Franklin D. Roosevelt.
As of 2020, using the popular vote margin gives a mean error for the system of ±5.94 points, with the 95% confidence interval for the popular vote margin for the system being ±15.43 points and the R-squared value being 56.78%. The 95% confidence interval for the popular vote margin was exceeded in 1912, 1920, 1924 and 1972, with errors of 18.14 points, 18.66 points, 18.77 points and 16.7 points respectively.
For Lichtman's predictions between 1984 and 2020, using the popular vote margin gives a mean error for the system of ±3.69 points, with the 95% confidence interval for the popular vote margin being ±8.61 points, which has not been exceeded for any election Lichtman has predicted (the largest error was 6.08 points in 2012) and the R-squared value being 70.56%.[59]
Lichtman responded to Silver, saying the system is based on a theoretical model and avoids random data-mining. He stated that the system is not designed to predict the margin of victory, and flattens for landslide victories such as those in 1912, 1920, 1924, 1932 and 1972, calling Silver's criticism "akin to critiquing a pregnancy test, not for its failure to detect pregnancies, but for its failure to determine the day of conception."
He defended only two keys being directly based on the economy, pointing out that economic factors can trigger other keys: for example, the Great Depression turned three additional keys false for President Hoover, with the Depression also resulting in widespread social unrest, a heavy loss of House seats for Hoover's Republicans in the 1930 midterms, and the nomination of a charismatic challenger in Franklin D. Roosevelt.[60]
Lichtman also stated that as a by-product of the system, it was possible to use it to predict the two-party vote for the incumbent party. As of the 2020 election, using the two-party vote gives a mean error for the system of ±3.29 points, with the 95% confidence interval for the two-party vote being ±8.99 points and the R-squared value being 51.82%. The 95% confidence interval for the two-party vote was exceeded in 1912, 1920 and 1924, with errors of 13.88 points, 9.69 points and 12.02 points respectively.
For Lichtman's predictions between 1984 and 2020, the mean error for the two-party vote is ±1.95 points, with the 95% confidence interval for the two-party vote being ±4.56 points, which has not been exceeded for any election Lichtman has predicted (the largest error was 3.37 points in 1996) and the R-squared value being 68.72%.
In 2011, following Lichtman's call that President Barack Obama would win re-election in 2012, Megan McArdle of The Atlantic criticized Lichtman's subjectivity in applying the keys and their reliance on retrospective perception, applying them to Herbert Hoover in 1932, writing, "Unlike the economic models that rely on external metrics, perception is doing a lot of the work here. Do we count Obama's stimulus but not Hoover's?"[61]
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