Exit Polls by Edison: Capture Consumers Where They Live, Shop and Travel With Our National Network of 6,000 Interviewers. Find Out How.

April 2008 Archives

The best predictions of the Democratic Presidential Primaries may have been made way back on February 6th, 2008 --the day after the Super Tuesday primaries.  On that date, a set of predictions was leaked to Bloomberg News showing the popular vote and delegate breakdown for all of the remaining contests from February 9th through June 3rd.  It proved prescient again last week when the unofficial results from Pennsylvania showed Clinton winning 84 delegates and Obama winning 74 delegates - the prediction from February 6th had Clinton winning 83 to 75.

So who is responsible for this nearly dead-on prediction?  The Obama campaign itself, as you can see at this site or download the spreadsheet yourself.

And Pennsylvania has not been the only spot-on prediction that was made in this spreadsheet.  It has picked the winner correctly in every contest since February 5th except for one - Obama claimed the Maine Caucuses even though this Magic 8-ball spreadsheet had Clinton squeaking out a win.

Almost as importantly, it has been right on the button in the delegate distribution in many states - the spreadsheet predicted the exact delegate breakdowns in Rhode Island, Vermont, Wyoming and Mississippi; was only off by one delegate in Ohio and Nebraska; by two in Wisconsin; and by three in Louisiana, Washington, Hawaii and the District of Columbia.

Obama Campaign Predictions.png

Now some might say that this is a self-fulfilling prophecy, with the Obama campaign investing money in places where it expects to do better to begin with.  However, the Obama campaign is not limited in its fundraising and seems to be spending as much as possible in every state. What this says to me is that the campaign had realistic expectations in every state after February 5th and it created a plan and a goal that the campaign subsequently achieved in each of these states.

So what does this spreadsheet prognosticate for the next round of primaries on May 6th? Seems like the Obama campaign is predicting a good day for the Obama campaign:

Indiana - Obama 39, Clinton 33;

North Carolina - Obama 61, Clinton 54. 

With its track record so far I wouldn't bet against the spreadsheet.