Professor Who Predicted Last Five Elections Says Trump Has 87% Chance of Winning
Helmut Norpoth still confident despite polls showing Hillary ahead
Norpoth’s
model has correctly predicted the outcome of the popular vote for every
election since 1996, including the 2000 race where Al Gore won the
popular vote but George W. Bush took the presidency.
“It
usually turns out that the candidate who does better in his party’s
primary beats the other guy who does less well,” said Norpoth, adding
that Trump’s margin of victory in New Hampshire and South Carolina
compared to Clinton (who lost in New Hampshire) was crucial to his
model.
The other factor is the
“swing of the pendulum,” which makes it far more likely for a change of
government if one party has been in power for two terms.
Norpoth said he has gone “all in” on a Donald Trump victory and is sticking with his bet.
“There are also quite a few colleagues of mine who have a prediction that Trump is going to make it,” added the professor.
Many
Trump supporters are now claiming that the media narrative that the
election result is a foregone conclusion is a trick designed to convince
potential Trump voters to stay home on November 8.
A confidential memo
allegedly obtained from Correct The Record, a Democratic Super PAC,
reveals a plan to “barrage” voters with high frequency polls that show
Hillary ahead in order to “declare election over,” while avoiding any
mention of the Brexit vote (which completely contradicted polls that
said Brexit would fail).
Emails revealed by Wikileaks
show how Democratic operatives planned to encourage “oversamples for
polling” in order to “maximize what we get out of our media polling.” In
other words, sample more Democrats than Republicans in order to make
people believe that Hillary’s lead is far greater than the reality of a
tight race.
Norpoth’s forecast of a Trump victory mirrors what’s taking place in the betting markets, with British bookmakers William Hill revealing
last week that 65% of all bets on the market have backed Trump to win
the election, a similar phenomenon to what happened before the Brexit
vote, where the polls were proven completely wrong.
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