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davidchapman141's profile
David Chapman
David Chapman
David Chapman
@davidchapman141

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David Chapman

@davidchapman141

Author & Historian. Rasmussen Reports, Red State, and Town Hall have written about me. History tells us what numbers can't...if you know where to look.

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Joined March 2015

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    David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

    Thread on my election prediction: My prediction is based solely on history and historical trends. The biggest issue in the campaign is Covid-19. There has been 11 Incumbents to face a pandemic during re-election. The incumbent is 11-0 (1820-present).

    4:54 PM - 11 Oct 2020
    • 428 Retweets
    • 1,124 Likes
    • Anthony Sisk kellymarie76🇺🇸 Peter LaBarbera Meng Li Austin Christopher Thurston Damon Fernandez DuckDuckGoose Dunamis
    76 replies 428 retweets 1,124 likes
      1. New conversation
      2. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        many experts say bad economies end incumbents careers. This is not true. The incumbent party is 12-11 when facing re-election during a bad economy. There is a huge correlation to primary performance with this historical trend.

        5 replies 36 retweets 187 likes
        Show this thread
      3. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        since the first primary in 1912, 7 incumbents have faced a bad economy during re-election. 5 of those incumbents had very poor primary performances and lost. 2 of them had strong primary performances and won re-election.

        3 replies 26 retweets 156 likes
        Show this thread
      4. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        In fact, no incumbent who has received at least 75% of the primary vote has lost re-election. Donald Trump received 94% of the primary vote, which is the 4th highest all-time. Higher than Eisenhower, Nixon, Clinton, and Obama.

        6 replies 98 retweets 327 likes
        Show this thread
      5. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        Trump is only 1 of 5 incumbents since 1912 to receive 90% or more of the primary vote. We've never seen primary participation levels for an incumbent like we did in the 2020 GOP primary. Trump set a record for most votes received by an incumbent with 18.1M.

        6 replies 87 retweets 352 likes
        Show this thread
      6. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        The previous record was held by Bill Clinton with 9.7M primary votes. We have also had riots. Incumbents are 6-6 when facing re-election during civil unrest, but 4-0 when facing a pandemic and civil unrest.

        1 reply 38 retweets 210 likes
        Show this thread
      7. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        Three times in history America has faced a pandemic, recession, and civil unrest during an election year. The incumbent party is 3-0 in those elections. What about polls? well, polls are predicting Trump's win. The ABC poll shows Trump with a 19 point enthusiasm advantage.

        6 replies 45 retweets 233 likes
        Show this thread
      8. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        Every candidate since 1988 that led in enthusiasm, has won the election. Pew gives Trump a 20 pt advantage in strength of support. The leader in this poll has won every election since 1964. All polls show voters expect Trump to win. The expectation question is more accurate...

        3 replies 66 retweets 270 likes
        Show this thread
      9. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        than the voter intention question that has Biden leading. Since 2004, the candidate that led in google searches has won the election. Trump leads Biden in google searches by a ratio of 3 to 1. On Polls The larger the class divide in the electorate, the larger the polling error

        2 replies 37 retweets 201 likes
        Show this thread
      10. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        There has been many elections where polls just failed to predict anything. 1948, 1952, 1976, 1980, 1996, 2000, 2012, 2014, 2016, and 2018 all had major polling errors. In 2012, the current trend of low response rates began. Since 2012, polls have gotten worse.

        4 replies 41 retweets 192 likes
        Show this thread
      11. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        The 2018 polls were not better than 2016, they were worse. Polls are incapable of predicting anything. especially with cancel culture and pollsters insistence on going in the field during major news events. 2020 has been one long major news event....

        3 replies 33 retweets 193 likes
        Show this thread
      12. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        so the likelihood of a large response bias is high this year. Joe Biden also has a history against him. No one who served 15 years in the Senate has ever become president. Joe Biden has served 36 years.

        4 replies 53 retweets 231 likes
        Show this thread
      13. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        The 14 year rule - No one gets elected president who needs longer than 14 years to get from his or her first gubernatorial or Senate victory to either the presidency or the vice presidency. Biden needed 36 years to become VP. History is against Biden and in favor of Trump.

        3 replies 62 retweets 258 likes
        Show this thread
      14. David Chapman‏ @davidchapman141 11 Oct 2020

        The only thing that shows Biden winning are polls. By every historical metric and trend, Donald Trump will win this election.

        27 replies 136 retweets 627 likes
        Show this thread
      15. End of conversation

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