Day 40 report

Bryan · Saturday 24 November 2007 · 8:30 am

Don’t forget to vote today.

Election tipping: The election tipping competition will close at 4pm today.

Newspoll: 52 to 48 in Labor’s favour. Commentary from Dennis Shanahan.

Morgan: 54.5 to 45.5 on 21-22 November 2007 (phone poll of 1648 voters). 53.5 to 46.5 on 23 November (phone poll of 2115 voters).

The trends are interesting. ACNielsen is trending away from the Coalition. Morgan face to face is a flat line. And Morgan phone, Newspoll and Galaxy are all trending to the Coalition. (ACNielsen was trending towards the Coalition prior to this week’s 57 to 43 poll result).

Opinion polls: Coalition two-party preferred vote moving average

You may need to hit the refresh button on your browser to see the latest charts.

Day 39 report

Bryan · Friday 23 November 2007 · 6:26 am

Apology: but I must be at work early this morning, so you will have to wait until this evening for a full report.

Conflicted polls: two polls out last night tell a very different story. Galaxy, has the Coalition in line for a two seat majority, despite losing the two-party preferred vote 52 to 48 in Labor’s favour. ACNielsen, predicts annihilation for Howard with a two-party preferred vote of 57 to 43 in Labor’s favour if preferences are allocated according to what people reported or 56 to 44 if votes are allocated using preference flows from 2004.

Opinion polls: Coalition two-party preferred vote

I have not updated the other graphs. You may need to hit the refresh or reload button on your browser to see the latest charts.

Day 38 report

Bryan · Thursday 22 November 2007 · 6:18 am

Yesterday, Labor released policies on the aged care workforce; disability funding; Kempsey hospital, GP super clinics for Mt Isa and the Riverina; and health clinics for defence families in Cairns, RAAF Edinburgh and Elizabeth North, and RAAF Amberley; and water recycling at Croydon Leisure Centre.

The Coalition released new policies on fiscal policy, hoons, vandals and violence and the NT.

Ouch: Coalition supporters have been caught handing out fake letters linking Labor to terrorists (DT, the Age).

Newspoll cumulative: The Australian has released another slice and dice of cumulative Newspolls by state, age, gender and rurality. Read Simon Jackman’s analysis.

Getup Senate poll: According to the Daily Telegraph, Getup has comissioned a Senate poll from Galaxy. The key message is that Green support is up to 13 per cent.

Razor gang: Expect a significant pruning for the public service should Rudd win the election (The Oz, SMH, CM).

Predictions: Professor Brian Costar believes Labor will win about 36 additional seats to give it 96 House of Representatives members.

Betting market: Portlandbet has opened a book on the exact number of seats Labor will win. The current odds are a little odd. The favourite is a Labor loss. The next favourite is a Labor win with 83 seats. The vigorish for this market was a little high for my liking (181 per cent).

Total Labor seats Odds Probability
73 or less $4.25 12.9%
74 $67.00 0.8%
75 $41.00 1.3%
76 $29.00 1.9%
77 $19.00 2.9%
78 $16.00 3.4%
79 $15.00 3.7%
80 $11.00 5.0%
81 $9.00 6.1%
82 $8.50 6.5%
83 $8.00 6.9%
84 $8.50 6.5%
85 $9.00 6.1%
86 $9.00 6.1%
87 $11.00 5.0%
88 $12.00 4.6%
89 $13.00 4.2%
90 $15.00 3.7%
91 $17.00 3.2%
92 $26.00 2.1%
93 $41.00 1.3%
94 $51.00 1.1%
95 $67.00 0.8%
96 $81.00 0.7%
97 $81.00 0.7%
98 $101.00 0.5%
99 $101.00 0.5%
100 or more $41.00 1.3%

Sportingbet has opened a book on Labor’s two-party preferred vote share. The favourtite with this book is 53 to 54 per cent. Using Antony’s calculator, this equates to something like 82 to 87 seats.

Percentage Labor TPP vote share Odds Probability Implied seats (from AG)
Less than 48% $26.00 2.8% 63 or less
48% to 49.99% $13.00 5.6% 63-71
50% to 51.99% $4.40 16.4% 71-76
52% to 52.99% $3.75 19.2% 76-82
53% to 53.99% $2.50 28.9% 82-87
54% to 55.99% $3.50 20.6% 87-96
56% or more $11.00 6.6% 96 or more

Day 37 report

Bryan · Wednesday 21 November 2007 · 6:58 am

Yesterday, the Coalition released new policies on Tasmania, Tasmanian transport, urban water, and clean energy.

Labor released policies on obesity, a Medicare office in Belmont, an Innovative Regions Centre in Geelong, primary industry and Regional Policy.

Predictions: Graham Richardson has predicted that labor will win 20 seats (giving it 80 in total), with a six or seven per cent swing. (As an aside a six to seven seat swing would typically yield between 83 and 90 seats in total for Labor).

Polls: The Adelaide Advertiser has a poll in the seat of Boothby. The result was 52 to 48 in the Coalition’s favour. Boothby is on a margin of 5.4 per cent, so this result appears to be a significantly smaller swing to Rudd than elsewhere in the nation.

A Morgan poll of five WA marginal seats yields 50.5 to 49.5 in the Coalition’s favour.

And I missed this one yesterday. A McNair poll in North Sydney had Joe Hockey and Mike Bailey on 50-50 each.

Eligibility: The Coalition has raised questions about the eligibility to stand for Parliament of 13 Labor candidates. However, these claims are contested:

The Herald Sun last night confirmed the Liberal Party claims were based on scouring websites, and did not involve any checks or phone calls to the respective boards, authorities and agencies involved.

Advertising: The election electronic advertising ban kicks in from midnight tonight. But the ban on advertising does not cover direct mail, telephone campaigning or internet advertising. Expect the phone spam to begin.

Live election night site: James Young has a live election night site James also has a probability based election calculator on his site.

Day 36 report

Bryan · Tuesday 20 November 2007 · 7:12 am

Yesterday, Labor announced policies on or funding for cyber-safety, mentors for students, defence and IT projects in Northern Adelaide, congestion on Sydney rail, the botanical gardens in Canberra and a Wimmera-Mallee water pipeline.

The Coalition announced its forestry policy.

Newspoll: Today’s Australian had the latest Newspoll. The headline prediction was 54 to 46 for Labor.

Newspoll: Two-party preferred vote for Coalition

The usual opinion poll graphs are here. You may need to hit the refresh or reload button on your browser to see the latest graphs.

Predictions: Simon Jackman predicted Labor would win 54 per cent of the two party preferred vote (with a 95 per cent confidence interval that the final result would be between 52 and 56 per cent. Drop that figure into Antony’s calculator, and it gives a prediction of 87 seats.

Simon’s prediction aligns with my perceptions of how the polls are trending. However, I discovered I am uncomfortable with the way both Antony’s calculator and mine translated two party preferred predictions into seat counts. We both used a simple, binary cut-off method. This can lead to very lumpy results. For example, with both of our online calculators 54.0 per cent for Labor yields 87 seats; but 54.1 per cent yields 90 seats.

A solution to my problem with the lumpiness of the online calculators came from a conversation I had with Antony Green a few weeks ago. Antony explained how the ABC does its election night seat prediction by summing the probability of the parties winning each seat (based on a booth by booth comparison function within seats). I decided to test a similar approach to converting TPP results to seat outcomes by summing probabilities. This approach allows a better recognition that individual seat swings are typically normally distributed around the national (or state based) uniform swing.

Rather than recording a seat as a win (1) or a loss (0), I have applied a cumulative probability function with a standard deviation of 2.3 percentage points. If a seat is sitting on the same margin as the predicted swing, it would have a 50 per cent chance of being won by both parties. If the seat was on a margin 4.6 percentage points below the predicted swing to Labor (ie. two standard deviations) it is 96 per cent likely to go to Labor. If a seat is sitting on a margin two standard deviations above the predicted swing to Labor, it has a 4 per cent chance of being won by Labor.

The results of my test of this concept follow. While Antony’s and my online calculators suggested 87 seats, the probability model suggested 88 seats. (There were also some minor differences between the probability model below, which is accurate to one decimal place, and the online calculators that round to two decimal places. In the binary cut-off model below, I have scored a seat as 0.5 if the swing equaled the margin).

Seat Swing / Margin (%) Labor seats won
Probability Method
Labor seats won
Simple cut-off method
New South Wales 6.7
PARRAMATTA 0.9 0.99 1.0
WENTWORTH 2.5 0.97 1.0
LINDSAY 2.9 0.95 1.0
EDEN-MONARO 3.3 0.93 1.0
BENNELONG 4.2 0.86 1.0
DOBELL 4.8 0.80 1.0
PAGE 5.5 0.70 1.0
PATERSON 6.3 0.57 1.0
COWPER 6.7 0.50 0.5
ROBERTSON 6.9 0.47 0.0
HUGHES 8.5 0.22 0.0
GILMORE 9.4 0.12 0.0
NORTH SYDNEY 10.0 0.08 0.0
MACARTHUR 11.1 0.03 0.0
WARRINGAH 11.3 0.02 0.0
CALARE 11.4 0.02 0.0
GREENWAY 11.4 0.02 0.0
HUME 12.8 0.00 0.0
       
Northern Territory 6.7
SOLOMON 2.8 0.96 1.0
       
Queensland 6.7
BONNER 0.5 1.00 1.0
MORETON 2.8 0.96 1.0
BLAIR 5.7 0.67 1.0
HERBERT 6.2 0.59 1.0
LONGMAN 6.7 0.50 0.5
PETRIE 7.4 0.38 0.0
FLYNN 7.7 0.33 0.0
HINKLER 8.3 0.24 0.0
BOWMAN 8.9 0.17 0.0
DICKSON 8.9 0.17 0.0
KENNEDY 8.9 0.17 0.0
DAWSON 10.0 0.08 0.0
LEICHHARDT 10.3 0.06 0.0
RYAN 10.4 0.05 0.0
FISHER 11.0 0.03 0.0
FORDE 11.5 0.02 0.0
WIDE BAY 12.2 0.01 0.0
FAIRFAX 12.4 0.01 0.0
       
South Australia 6.7
KINGSTON 0.1 1.00 1.0
WAKEFIELD 0.7 1.00 1.0
MAKIN 0.9 0.99 1.0
BOOTHBY 5.4 0.71 1.0
STURT 6.8 0.48 0.0
MAYO 13.6 0.00 0.0
       
Tasmania 6.7
BRADDON 1.1 0.99 1.0
BASS 2.6 0.96 1.0
       
Victoria 6.7
DEAKIN 5.0 0.77 1.0
McMILLAN 5.0 0.77 1.0
CORANGAMITE 5.3 0.73 1.0
LA TROBE 5.8 0.65 1.0
McEWEN 6.4 0.55 1.0
GIPPSLAND 7.7 0.33 0.0
HIGGINS 8.8 0.18 0.0
DUNKLEY 9.4 0.12 0.0
KOOYONG 9.8 0.09 0.0
GOLDSTEIN 10.0 0.08 0.0
MENZIES 10.7 0.04 0.0
FLINDERS 11.1 0.03 0.0
CASEY 11.4 0.02 0.0
WANNON 12.4 0.01 0.0
       
Western Australia 6.7
HASLUCK 1.8 0.98 1.0
STIRLING 2.0 0.98 1.0
KALGOORLIE 6.3 0.57 1.0
CANNING 9.5 0.11 0.0
FORREST 10.5 0.05 0.0
MOORE 10.8 0.04 0.0
TANGNEY 11.8 0.01 0.0
       
NATIONAL TOTAL
Labor’s base of seats   60.0 60.0
Gains on that base   27.9 28.0
Labor’s likely outcome 87.9 88.0

But this leaves me with a dilemma. How do I compare election predictions from those commentators who have provided a prediction in terms of a TPP percentage, and those who have made a prediction on the basis of seat counts. My resolution is to covert the TPP predictions to a simple cut-off prediction from Antony’s calculator, and the probability prediction from my spreadsheet. The results follow.

Commentator Actual Prediction Approx. seats using
probability method
Approx. seats using
cut-off method
William Bowe (Poll Bludger) 84 seats ALP
Simon Jackman 54% ALP (+/-2%) 88 seats ALP 87 seats ALP
Malcolm Mackerras 89 seats ALP
Peter Brent (Mumble) 90 seats ALP
Possums Pollytics 54.9% ALP 94 seats ALP 94 seats ALP
Geoff Lambert 55.5% ALP / 97 Seats ALP    

As an aside, an advantage of a probability based model like the one above is that it allows for a direct comparison of seat win probabilities with the betting market. This allows for a better identification of under-priced and over-priced odds. In this context, having a view on the state based swings is also useful to model.

Next election, I wiill work on a probability based seat calculator, rather than the simple binary cut-off model I did for this election.

Update: Antony Green sent me the following email.

Just to let you know, my prototype calculator that was based on probability calculations produced 88 seats, not the 87 produced by the web version on the ABC site. That matches your table of calculations.

I get a +/- 5 seats on this prediction. The reason we didn’t do the probabilities on the web calculator was because of the extra calculation load imposed by the probability calculation, plus the fact that the +/- error was roughly the same whatever result came out of the calculator. And the only difference in Labor seats won tended to come out at 1 or 2 seats.

And Will From Kooyong sent me this.

I read your blog this morning, and it’s quite funny how yesterday I had decided to create a Monte Carlo simulator to predict seats that the likelihood of a win for the ALP. I used a std of of 3.05 (based on last election’s swings), and I tried your std of 2.3. The results I got were very close including the probability of seats changing hands.

Here is a post I put on Poll Bludger late last night when I ran it for a 54% TPP for the ALP, 3.05 for the std and 100,000 simulations. (I ran it for a 1m and it was very much the same).

http://www.pollbludger.com/?p=729&cp=3#comment-88637