This year in politics has been a crazy, unpredictable ride, thanks in large part to Donald Trump, but that isn’t stopping political scientists from using data to try to predict the outcome of this year’s election.
One man, Helmut North, has attempted to do just that using a statistical model that had been correct for all but one election in the last 104 years.
The results — even for the most passionate Donald Trump supporter — are hard to believe. The perpetually correct model not only has Donald Trump winning the presidency, but the odds of him winning are huge.
The model doesn’t just predict a win, or even a landslide. It predicts, by all measures, a Donald Trump blowout.
To see just how high his chances are, see the next page:
Diebold voting machines are owned by one of the largest supporters of the Republican Party in the country. You’d think that they’d be read in favor of the Republicans. You people just can’t accept that you’re running an idiot for a candidate
The president does not determine a States voting requirements. That’s up to the State Board of Elections.
Judy Bauer Brown….no, Trump only has to win one little town that has ten residents all of whom are Republicans. Then he gets all the electoral votes for that state… Of course he has to win the whole state!!! Don’t you remember when the recount in Florida in 2000 gave the state 2 George W bush… Ironically the same state or his brother have been governor. No fraud there of course.
If you have to ask, you’re not educated enough to vote
W did it in 2000. How did that work out for us? Let’s see, 9/11. A false War based on lies about wmd. About 4,000 American lives lost in that war. Great job GOP
Exactly because diebold is owned by a huge Republican supporter and they make the voting machines
Old news, done before the primaries.
Pat Murphy, thanks!
MUAHAHAHAHA.. hehehehehehe.. This is great stuff. You idiots will believe anything!
I believe you’re thinking of George W Bush. Obama won both the popular vote and the electoral college in each of his presidential runs.