campaign financing and election outcome a study of the correlation between fundraising in the u.s....
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Campaign Financing and Election Outcome
A study of the correlation between fundraising in the U.S. and popular votes in presidential
elections
Overview
• Project Background– Brainstorming– Federal Election Commission
• Goals/Objectives• Preliminary Comparison
– Election 2000 and 2004– Relationship Findings
• Election 2008– Primaries
• Republican Candidates• Democratic Candidates
– General Election• Total Party Contributions• Electoral College
• Conclusions• Limitations and Future Work
Background
• Election 2008 in the media constantly• First Presidential Election in 12 years with
no previous ties to the White House• General Public knowledge about
Campaign Financing• Federal Election Commission
Federal Election Commission
• Ensures that candidates and convention committees requesting public funds have satisfied the eligibility requirements.
• Reviews submitted contributions • Audits all public funding recipients to
ensure that the funds were spent in compliance with the law
Presidential Candidates and the Federal Election Commission
• Only candidates seeking nomination by a political party for the office of President are eligible to receive primary matching funds
• A candidate must establish eligibility by showing broad-based public support: must raise in excess of $5,000 in each of at least 20 states ($100,000).
• Although an individual may contribute up to $2,300 to a primary candidate, only a maximum of $250 per individual applies toward the $5,000 threshold in each state.
Presidential Candidates must agree to the following:
• Limit campaign spending for all primary elections to $10 million (plus a cost-of-living adjustment COLA). This is called the national spending limit.
• Limit campaign spending in each state to $200,000 plus COLA, or to a specified amount based on the number of voting age individuals in the state (plus COLA), whichever is greater.
• Limit spending from personal funds to $50,000.
Goals
• Presidential Elections 2000 and 2004– Show relationship between Campaign
Contributions and Popular Vote by state• Presidential Election 2008
– Predict Primary Election using Funds Raised from Quarters 1 and 2 of 2007
– Speculate General Election Results
Objectives• Inform average voter about the
relationship between presidential campaign funding and political race outcome
• Illustrate a relationship between popular votes and campaign funding
Election 2000
Election 2000
Election 2004
Election 2004
Republican Candidates 2008
TotalsRomney: 30,859,721 Giuliani: 30,590,059McCain: 20,900,595
Democratic Candidates 2008
TotalsClinton: 47,669,977Obama: 42,953,612Edwards: 18,213,607
Democratic Primary Outcome
• Considered candidate that rose the most money in each state the winner • The election of delegates to the Democratic National Convention is
handled differently in every state – but all consider state population as factor
• To account for population, we used the number of electoral votes to determine the primary winner
Electoral Votes• Clinton: 284 • Obama: 167• Edwards: 87
Republican Primary Outcome
• Considered candidate that rose the most money in each state the winner • The election of delegates to the Republican National Convention is
handled differently in every state – but all consider state population as factor
• To account for population, we used the number of electoral votes to determine the primary winner
Electoral Votes• Guiliani: 237• Romney: 231• McCain: 70
Comparison of Republican Candidates vs.
Democratic Candidates Funds Raised
Totals:
Democrats: $108,837,196
Republicans: $82,355,375
General Election 2008
General Election Outcome
Total Projected Electoral Votes:
Democrats (Blue): 358/538 = 67%
Republicans (Red): 180/538 = 33%
What about percentage error from past elections?
Remember? States where candidates with more campaign contributions didn’t win the popular vote
2000 – 15 states
2004 – 8 states
In 2000, the percentage difference by electoral vote is 26%
In 2004, the percentage difference by electoral vote is 14%
Average is 20%
So, assuming +/- 20% error…
Democratic electoral votes: 250 – 466
Republican electoral votes: 36 – 288
Votes required to win election: 270
Chance of Clinton victory: 91%
Chance of Giuliani victory: 7%
Chance of no electoral winner*: 2%
* The new House of Representatives votes between the top three candidates to select a president.
Conclusions• 2008 Presidential Race
– Democratic Party nominee: Hillary Clinton– Republican Party nominee: Rudy Giuliani
• Interestingly, neither of these candidates raised the largest amount of money in Q1 and Q2 of 2007
• Winning in highly populated states counts!• In general election and Republican primary,
state winner takes all
Conclusions
Source: http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mejn/election/
2004 Presidential Election Results by Population Cartogram
2004 Presidential Election Results by State
Population Counts!
Conclusions• 44th President of the United States: Hillary
Clinton• Why?
– Clinton will win Democratic primary due to support in populous states
– General election relies heavily on patterns from 2000 and 2004: popular vote in ~80% states went to the candidate whose party raised more money in that state
Limitations
• Problem: The primary/caucus process varies for each state and party
• Solution: Study the primary/caucus process for the 2008 election and develop a more complex formula for determining the winner
Limitations• Problem: Our study does not consider the
impact of 3rd party and Independent candidates on the general election
• Problem: Our study only includes the three front-runners for each party in primary predictions
Ralph Nader won 3% of the popular vote in 2000.
• Solution: Include additional candidates in our study.
Limitations
• Problem: Our analysis relies on pattern established by two quarters of fundraising– Presidential primaries will take place after four
quarters of fundraising– General election contributions will also include
federal matching funds• Solution: Study contributions to 2004
presidential candidates for the first two quarters of 2003
Conclusions
• Suggestions for similar projects– Simplify your problem!– Create a map template– Study this subject closer to
election, if possible
Future Work
2004 Presidential Election Results by County
2004 Presidential Election Results by State
• Our study does not account for contributions and voting at the county level, only the state level.
Source: http://www.princeton.edu/~rvdb/JAVA/election2004/PurpleAmericaPosterAll50.gif
Future Work
• Revisit this project in early January 2008– Fundraising figures for all four quarters of
2007– Directly before state primaries begin– Calculate federal matching funds for
Democratic and Republican nominees
Future Work
• Use this data to plan a campaign trail• Campaign staffers decide to plan visits to states
where races are very close• Our Suggestions:
– (W) denotes the candidate currently predicted to win– Democratic Primary
• California is very close between Obama and Clinton (W)• Iowa is very close between Obama and Edwards (W)
– Republican Primary• Illinois is very close between all candidates. McCain (W)• Florida is very close between Romney and Guiliani (W)
Sources
• Federal Election Commission (FEC) http://www.fec.gov• United States Geological Survey (USGS)
http://www.usgs.gov• Center for Responsive Politics
http://www.opensecrets.org• Maps and cartograms of the 2004 US presidential
election results (University of Michigan) http://www-personal.umich.edu/~mejn/election/• Election 2004 Results
http://www.princeton.edu/~rvdb/JAVA/election2004/
Questions?
Calculating Likely Election Winner• Clinton
– For Clinton to lose, number of electoral votes is between 250 and 269.
– Clinton’s possible number of electoral votes according to analysis is between 250 and 466.
– Clinton’s chances of losing (269-250)/(466-250) ~ 0.09 (9%)– Conversely, Clinton’s changes of winning = 91%
• Giuliani– For Giuliani to win, number of electoral votes is between 270
and 288.– Giuliani’s possible number of electoral votes according to
analysis is between 36 and 288.– Giuliani’s chances of winning = (288-270)/(288-36) ~ 0.07 (7%)
• Chances of no electoral winner: 100 – Clinton’s chances (91) – Giuliani’s chances (7) = 2%