Projecting confidence: How the probabilistic horse race confuses and demobilizes the public

Journal article
Featured
Journal of Politics, 2019
Authors

Sean Westwood

Solomon Messing

Yphtach Lelkes

Published

January 1, 2019

Sean Westwood, Solomon Messing, Yphtach Lelkes (2019). Projecting confidence: How the probabilistic horse race confuses and demobilizes the public. Journal of Politics.

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Abstract

Recent years have seen a dramatic change in horserace coverage of elections in the U.S.—shifting focus from late-breaking poll numbers to sophisticated meta-analytic forecasts that emphasize candidates’ chance of victory. Could this shift in the political information environment affect election outcomes? We use experiments to show that forecasting increases certainty about an election’s outcome, confuses many, and decreases turnout. Furthermore, we show that election forecasting has become prominent in the media, particularly in outlets with liberal audiences, and show that such coverage tends to more strongly affect the candidate who is ahead—raising questions about whether they contributed to Trump’s victory over Clinton in 2016. We bring empirical evidence to this question, using ANES data to show that Democrats and Independents expressed unusual confidence in a decisive 2016 election outcome—and that the same measure of confidence is associated with lower reported turnout.

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