ciphergoth: (election)
[personal profile] ciphergoth
After watching far, far too much West Wing (ie all of it - finally reached the end which is both bad and good) I created this image to visualize the results of the 2004 election. I want something like this updated live for 2008, with states not yet called ranked based on predictions.



You'll need to view it full size to properly see what's going on.

(updated image with new algorithm for placing labels)

Date: 2007-01-09 09:11 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] aster13.livejournal.com
Ooh that's interesting. I'm busily working my way through The West Wing, having been lent series 2 (now all watched) and now series 3. Sadly, she didn't have series 1, but it pretty much still makes sense. It's very good (albeit terribly idealised in terms of just how gosh-darn ethical they are in the white house) and i think it's teaching me a lot about the American political system, which appears to be fiendishly complex!

Date: 2007-01-09 10:49 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] drdoug.livejournal.com
The y-axis is clearly the margin of victory, and I'm guessing the x-axis is the number of electoral college votes - right?

The most useful live data I found was tables showing states not yet called clearly, with projections for them and their electoral college votes, with the entire rest of the dataset reduced to two numbers (votes securely for D & R).

Not sure a live update of this graph would be better. Oh - unless you change the ranking algorithm put uncalled states in between Dem and Rep, and show 'em in lighter versions of the colour they're predicted to go, or grey where it's too close to call. The relation of that mid-point to the half-way line - and the size of the votes up for grabs - would be great fun to watch, and you could just focus on that portion of the graph, dumping the rest.

But all this is supposing the next election again comes down to the results from hard-to-call states. It's entirely possible it'll be clearer, in which case the prolonged period of interest in the marginal zone won't exist in the same way.

Nice

Date: 2007-01-09 12:45 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] phantas.livejournal.com
It would be interesting to see the same graph with the area of the rectangles being the number of seats: y-axis would still be the margin of victory, but the x-axis would be number-of-seats/margin.

Visually the blue and red would correspond to the percentage of seats for each side and the x-axis would give the influence of a change.

Date: 2007-01-09 01:21 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kimkali.livejournal.com
~impressed~
Nothing like turning such a purposefully complex thing into a user-friendly diagram. Subversion with a smile :)

With anythig like the know-how I'd be tempted to animate it, and instead of bars of colour there would be little parades of elephanst and donkeys lining up and piling up. Oh what larks they'd have!
Although such would rather infringe the purity of it's purpose. Although we can hope that some day electoral systems will actually be taught in schools. THEN there can be enimated elephants and donkeys AND purity of purpose.

Date: 2007-01-09 02:21 pm (UTC)
ext_3375: Banded Tussock (Default)
From: [identity profile] hairyears.livejournal.com


That's actually very encouraging to see: I had expected the profile to be much steeper, representing a tiny percentage of 'marginal' states in the middle and solid bulges of safe constituencies either side.

This topology is more than mere psephological topiary: with less than 5% of Senate Seats ever changing hands in an election, the body politic has come to see 'getting out the vote' as the key to victory - preach to the faithful and avoid the electoral liability of wishy-washy policies that appeal to a moderate centre.

An interesting side-effect of this is that the electoral gains of the Democrats - predictably, in the narrow slice of winnable seats - has served to further radicalise the Republicans. Normally, an electoral defeat is cause for self-examination, reining in the extremists, and reformulating an appeal to the political centre; but the Republicans who've been kicked out were, of necessity, the centrists and moderates who would've led such a movement.

So it's encouraging to see that there is an expanding 'battleground' of winnable seats where a centrist campaign might be a viable strategy...

Assuming, of course, that the margins displayed in the graph emerged from an internal distribution of political affiliations that mirrors the larger profile, with its moderate centre progressing gradually outwards to the hardcore faithful and the fruitcakes on the fringes: those 'marginal' results might conceal local electorates with razor-thin margins between highly polarised voting blocks with no 'level ground' of moderate voters between them at all.

Date: 2007-01-09 02:41 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] mskala.livejournal.com
I'd suggest contacting the "votemaster" at electoral-vote.com (http://electoral-vote.com/). This kind of visualization is the sort of thing I'd expect to see on that site, and he's already doing the data collection, has hosting that can withstand the load if it becomes as popular as it should be, etc.

Date: 2007-01-09 03:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] nikolasco.livejournal.com
I've suggested this for infosthetics (http://infosthetics.com/) ([livejournal.com profile] infosthetics)

Date: 2007-01-10 03:13 am (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Nice graph! It's a bear of a dataset to try to represent visually. I like how you can do things with this like "how many votes would need to be swung to reverse the results of the election" by just comparing the amount of red area to the left of the 50% line versus other imbalances. Neat.

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