One of the pleasures of running a popular Web site is the correspondence. Click here for some selected letters from the last few days of various types – illuminating, entertaining, and unintentionally hilarious.
One of the pleasures of running a popular Web site is the correspondence. Click here for some selected letters from the last few days of various types – illuminating, entertaining, and unintentionally hilarious.
Tags: 2004 Election
| State | Margin | Power |
|---|---|---|
| CO | Obama +6% | 100.0 |
| PA | Obama +7% | 32.9 |
| NM | Obama +9% | 31.8 |
| VA | Obama +4% | 27.4 |
| NV | Obama +6% | 19.7 |
| OH | Obama +4% | 19.0 |
| NH | Obama +11% | 5.6 |
| FL | Obama +2% | 3.3 |
| WI | Obama +11% | 2.4 |
| MN | Obama +12% | 1.4 |
| NJ | Obama +16% | 0.00029626 |
Andrew says there was “a routing problem this morning between the University and quite a few outside websites — a split in the internet, if you will.” For the next EV estimator update, check back at noon…
Biden v. Palin drew 70 million viewers, one-third more than Obama v. McCain. VP debates usually don’t matter, but I wondered… Read more »
Tomorrow (Friday) at noon, I’ll give a talk in Kosuke Imai and Dustin Tingley’s political methodology seminar. If you’re nearby, you’re welcome to attend. Of course, the math will all be included. The blurb is here (PDF).
Update: Here’s another local event, happening next Tuesday: a panel on the reliability of state polls featuring both pollsters and academics, including Andrew Gelman, author of Red State, Blue State, Rich State, Poor State. I hear the panel will be webcast. If so I’ll post a link.
Archive for Meta-Analysis Thread »© 2004–2012 Samuel S.-H. Wang
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