What’s the Amplitude, Karl?

So Karl Rove has whipped out “the math” once again to point out that the average number of seats gained by the “out party” in the mid-term year of a president’s first term in office is 23. Eh. First off, in the ten elections which fit this description, the out party has only gained 20 or more seats four times. The median, as you might guess, is a good bit lower – just 17.

But I think reaching back in time as far as Rove does is misleading. Now, Rove of course is always misleading, but this time he’s conning members of his own party into thinking 23 is their due. I’m happy to let them keep believing him. But you, dear SSPers, are smarter than that. And this graphic is all you need:

The above chart shows how many seats the Dems gained or lost each year, going back to 1918, the year in which the direct election of senators began. As you can see, the further to the right you go – ie, the more recent you get – the smaller the amplitude of the curve. In plainer English, the size of the swings from cycle-to-cycle has gotten smaller over time.

Put another way: In the 34 elections from 1918 through 1984, only six times did we see single-digit changes in the number of Democrats in the House. In just 12 elections from 1986 to 2008, there were single-digit shifts nine times. During that time period, the average shift has been less than 13 and the median more like 7.

Still a further way of looking at the phemonenon in the first chart is this:

There are a lot of ways you can slice this apple, but I’ve chosen the simplest. This is simply a running average of the swing in House seats going back to 1918. (That is to say, each point on the line represents the average from 1918 to that date.) The trend is unmistakable – the average swing has been inexorably shrinking for a very long time.

The reasons for this change are multiplex and endlessly debatable. They include, among other things, a mixture of more sophisticated gerrymandering, intensive incumbent-protection programs, and the sharpening of ideological boundaries between the parties following the post-Voting Rights Act realignment.

With this realigning shakeout largely concluded, it’s difficult to see many more wave elections in the near future. If you want to let ancient history be your guide, as Karl Rove does, then sure, big swings look eminently possible, even likely. But the recent past is much more informative, and it looks like we’ve settled into something resembling a pattern of taut stability.

We may yet lose seats in the House in 2010, but I very much doubt as many as the Rover thinks we might. And this almost certainly means that the Republican Party has a difficult slog ahead of it for a long time to come.

UPDATE: I’ve created another chart, this time of the ten-cycle moving average starting in 1936. It’s a little bit “noisier” (not surprisingly), but it also shows the same clear downward trend in swing size:

Crowdsourcing Pres-by-CD, 3rd Thread

Just a quick update on our project to crowdsource presidential results by congressional district. The following states are all in need of links to official data sources and “plans of attack”:

Alabama

Colorado

Florida

Illinois

Indiana

Louisiana

Mississippi

New Jersey

Oklahoma

South Carolina

Tennessee

Texas

Utah

Washington

The data sources don’t have to have actual numbers available yet – in fact, since most states won’t certify their vote totals for a while yet, that is only to be expected. And as for “plan of attack,” I’m talking about how we expect to crunch the numbers – do the states publish results by CD? Do they divide up (relatively) neatly by towns or counties? Or will we have to rely on raw precinct data?

Please input any relevant links or information into this spreadsheet. Thanks!

KS-Sen: Jerry Moran (R) to Run for Senate – Maybe Tiahrt, Too

The first House open seat of the 2010 election:

With the 2008 election season over, Rep. Jerry Moran wasted little time taking the next step in his likely bid for higher office.

The western Kansas Republican filed paperwork Friday that allows him to accept contributions for a U.S. Senate campaign.

Moran, of Hays, has been telling constituents for months that he plans to seek the seat being vacated in 2010 by Republican Sam Brownback. His statement of candidacy filed with the Federal Election Commission and the secretary of the U.S. Senate formalizes that process.

“Jerry was on the ballot for the U.S. House for the last time,” Moran spokesman Travis Murphy said Friday. “He’s made his intentions known for some time that this was his plan.”

Don’t get your hopes up. This seat had a PVI of R+20. We don’t yet know how Obama did here, but it can’t have been great. Perhaps of greater interest to open-seat fans is this tidbit:

Moran may not be the only prominent Republican laying the groundwork for a Senate bid. Rep. Todd Tiahrt, of the Wichita area, has not ruled out such a campaign and has been traveling the state recently to raise his profile outside his south-central Kansas district.

“An open Senate seat will draw a lot of interest, and my feeling is Kansas will not have two senators from the same congressional district,” Tiahrt said Friday, a reference to Republican Sen. Pat Roberts, who also represented western Kansas before ascending to the Senate. “I can guarantee there will be others who will get into this race.”

Tiahrt swamped what had looked like a promising challenge from state Sen. Donald Betts by a punishing 64-32 margin. I wouldn’t expect this R+12 district to be much more promising as an open seat, but you never know. At the very least, another Pearce vs. Wilson-style GOP senate primary would be fun.

GA-Sen: How Much Is Obama Helping Martin?

Atlanta Journal-Constitution:

One of the big question marks in Georgia’s ongoing U.S. Senate campaign is how much President-elect Barack Obama will get involved.

Democrat Jim Martin desperately wants Obama to come here to boost Martin’s campaign against Republican incumbent U.S. Sen. Saxby Chambliss, who has already secured a promise from Sen. John McCain (R-Ariz.) to visit the state on Chambliss’ behalf.

Obama, however, had not responded to Martin’s overtures as of Sunday. And with the president-elect’s weekend calls for an end to partisan rancor after the Nov. 4 election, his involvement in Georgia’s bitter partisan brawl of a Senate race appeared anything but certain.

“Our campaign has talked to their campaign,” said Martin spokeswoman Kate Hansen. “And that it as far as it has gone. We would be honored to have him. We know his operation is incredibly busy right now.”

I hope this state of affairs changes soon. There is precedent for getting involved: President-elect Bill Clinton came down to GA to campaign for Wyche Fowler in his run-off against Paul Coverdell in 1992. I wouldn’t necessarily expect Obama to go that far, but even a single blast to his e-mail list could make a huge difference. So could a TV ad. It appears he may have sent some staffers to help Martin, but I think he can do more.

I can understand the Obama team wanting the election to be over, as far as they are concerned,  so that they can focus on governing. And I’m sure they don’t want to get into a potentially stature-diminishing proxy fight with John McCain (who is coming to the state for Chambliss). But I think that any such direct confrontation is easily avoided.

We’re going to have plenty of legislative fights which come down to a single vote in the Senate – and we’ll win a lot more of them with Jim Martin on our side.

Crowdsourcing Pres-by-CD, 2nd Thread

Last week I wrote about a new crowdsourcing project we’re undertaking here at SSP: compiling presidential voting results by congressional district. Here’s a quick status report:

  • We’ve figured out ways to calculated pres-by-CD for a little over half the states. See this spreadsheet, which anyone can edit.

  • However, there are many states where we don’t have a planned method for calculating the numbers. If you have thoughts about how to figure out those states, please add them (and any links you have to official or soon-to-be-official results).

  • Separately, if you’ve started doing work on some actual numbers, I strongly encourage you to share that work in separate Google spreadsheets. I’ve added a new column on the right in the “mothership” spreadsheet called “Calculations.” Please post URLs to any other spreadsheets you’ve created to crunch the data.

And if you have any other ideas for this project, please share them here in comments. Thanks!

UPDATE: Here’s a very simple example of what I mean by “showing your work.” The CT SoS very kindly makes raw presidential vote totals by CD available – you can see them in this PDF. I’ve uploaded a Google spreadsheet into which I’ve imported those numbers from the PDF, then did some super-simple math to calculate the percentages in each district.

Even if you’re working with something more complicated like counties or precincts, you can and should create something similar to my CT sheet. That way, everyone can see what data you’re using and verify that things look right.

UPDATE 2: Thanks to an awesome find by statsgeek, I put together a spreadsheet for MN as well. There are two tabs – “Formatted Data” is just a pretty condensed version of the raw data, which you can see in all its glory in the second tab. The state of MN actually made this extremely easy, going so far as to calculate the percentages each candidate got. It was just a matter of parsing the file properly and digging out the right numbers.

IL-Sen: Dan Seals on Blago’s Short List

Some new names cropping up in the bid to replace Sen. Obama:

As of Wednesday, the short list of potential Obama replacements included: Reps. Jesse Jackson Jr. (D-Ill.) and Jan Schakowsky (D-Ill.), state Comptroller Dan Hynes (D), state Veterans Affairs Director Tammy Duckworth (D), retiring state Senate President Emil Jones (D), state Sen. Kwame Raoul (D), and marketing consultant Dan Seals (D), who lost his second consecutive race last night to Rep. Mark Kirk (R-Ill.).

I don’t know if Seals has a real shot at this, and  his selection would probably cheese off some long-time pols who might perceive that he didn’t “wait his turn.” But regardless, he’d be an excellent, excellent choice. I think he would represent Illinois well and would be a strong candidate when the seat is up again in 2010.

Preliminary 2008 House Election Results

I’ve taken the preliminary House election results rounded up at Wikipedia and put them into a more user-friendly spreadsheet. (I also added numbers for CA & WA.) A link to the full sheet is here. Enjoy!

UPDATE (James): One thing we’ll have to update in this chart are the SC-01 numbers. Linda Ketner actually did amazingly well, scoring 47.88% of the vote against crumb-bum GOP Rep. Henry Brown. It seems like there was a tabulation error in the previous results.

IL-Sen: Whom Might Blagojevich Appoint? (Round 3)

Back in August of 2007, when primary season was heating up, we asked you guys to look deep into the future, ponder a potential Obama presidency, and think about whom Illinois Gov. Rod Blagojevich might appoint to replace his state’s junior senator.

Well, that scenario has now come to pass (and the unpopular Blago has managed to hang on to his office). Speculation is already running wild. Here are some of the names under consideration:

Valerie Jarrett (real estate executive & Obama adviser)

Rep. Jesse Jackson, Jr. (IL-02)

Rep. Luis Gutierrez (IL-04)

Rep. Danny Davis (IL-07)

Rep. Jan Schakowsky (IL-09)

AG Lisa Madigan

Comptroller Dan Hynes

Treasurer Alexi Giannoulias

IL Dept. of Veterans Affairs Dir. Tammy Duckworth

Blago himself (barf)

I’m sure there are other names out there as well. So whom do you think Blago might appoint? And whom do you think he should appoint? (Note that this seat is up for re-election in 2010.)

UPDATE by Crisitunity: We also discussed this in June. Other African-American names we discussed there were Senate President Emil Jones (too old and too tied to Blago), Secretary of State Jesse White (too old, but probably a good 2-year placeholder), State Senator James Claybourne (too Downstate), and ex-Senator Carol Mosely-Braun (not too good at getting re-elected).

Crowdsourcing Project: Presidential Results by CD

(Bumped.)

A favorite reference for election junkies like those of us who inhabit this site is, of course, presidential results by congressional district. Unfortunately, most states don’t publish this data,  but it’s reliably churned out by a firm called Polidata every four years. It’s a difficult task, though, because it usually involves crunching data on a precinct level (and also figuring out what the hell to do with absentee ballots), so Polidata typically releases its findings some time in March after a presidential races.

But the good news is that, working together, we can come up with some preliminary data for at least some states. There are at least three types of states where we can get this data relatively easily:

1) States with just one at-large district (duh), like Montana.

2) States which actually publish presidential results by CD, such as Virginia.

3) States where district lines follow county lines or, in New England, township lines (or at least follow them closely), like Iowa.

Where we need help (at this stage) is in figuring out which states fall into the second and third categories. I know California also releases results by CD, but I believe a few other states do as well. And Arkansas and West Virginia follow county lines, but some other states probably do, too.

Also, let’s use this thread for brainstorming about other ways we might try to figure out presidential results by CD (short of acquiring detailed precinct-by-precinct data). Please share your thoughts in comments.

UPDATE: Jeffmd observes that some states offer easy-to-use precinct data, so where available, that might be an option as well. If you’re aware of any states which provide this information, please let us know that as well.

UPDATE 2: I’ve created a public Google Docs spreadsheet that we can use to compile a list of data sources. Please feel free to input any helpful information you’re aware of. Note that we’re not looking for the actual numbers just yet – rather, we want to know where we can find the numbers (and what format – ie, CD, county, precinct, etc. – we should be looking for). And if you are adding a URL, please use TinyURL.