Will Senate ticket splitting go down in 2024?
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Plus
27
Ṁ1388
Dec 1
33%
chance

This has happened in 5 consecutive elections, all the way back to 2000. It may actually go back further but I'm too lazy to calculate.

The way I operationalize this is with the r^2 for predicting the two-way Senate vote with the two-way Presidential vote. In 2000, it was 20.6%. In 2004, it was 39.5%. In 2008, it was 48.8%. In 2012, it was 50.7%. In 2016, it was 82.6%. And in 2020, it was a remarkable 91.9%. If 2024's r^2 is higher than 2020's value, this market will resolve to Yes. If it is lower, the market will resolve to no.

Here's a visualization of this trend:

There are some Senate races where candidates will be extremely reliant on relatively high levels of ticket splitting (e.g. Montana, Ohio, Maryland) and I'm fairly skeptical.

All numbers are my own calculations and it's entirely possible I made a mistake somewhere, so when it's time to resolve the market I'll double and triple check the 2020 and 2024 numbers.

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Do Angus King and Bernie Sanders count as Democrats for this calculation? Is the NE class 1 election with Dan Osborn excluded?

all three count

reposted

Love this market. Great idea. Just from vibes I think current polling suggests ticket splitting will increase.

Well, my vibes say now maybe not so much? lol

bought Ṁ25 NO

It does indeed go way back. Check 1988 for example, especially Virginia.

bought Ṁ10 NO

I expect Trump to easily win Montana and Ohio, but the Senate races there will be closer.

@PlasmaBallin the biggest outperformers are often not who you expect!

In 2020, Susan Collins is predictably #1, but then Ben Sasse, Jack Reed, Maggie Hassan, Bill Cassidy, and Mike Espy. Steve Bullock was projected by polls to be a massive overperformer and is all the way at #8, only 5 points better than Biden.

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