Testing the accuracy of the Downs@? spatial voter model on forecasting
the winners of the French parliamentary elections in
Lemennicier, B.
, Katir-Lescieux, H.
Pages 32-41
AbstractThis paper emphasizes a method of forecasting electoral outcomes based
on the spatial approach of Harold Hotelling and Anthony Downs' basic model
of democracy. This method of forecasting the outcome of presidential
elections departs from the standard approach that uses regression models of
the popular vote based on a reward-punishment analysis for citizens, as
well as other methods like Delphi experts surveys or futures markets for
election and probability methods based on opinion polls. Anthony Downs
discusses at some length the crucial role of the form of the distribution
of preferences along the political left-right scale (unimodal, bimodal or
multimodal) and the key role of the location of the overall median voter on
this distribution in selecting the winner. The median voter theorem says
the winner of the election will be the leader of the camp whose own median
voter is closest to the overall median voter. We test the accuracy of this
argument ''a la Downs'', both on a small sample of eight French
presidential elections and on a large sample consisting of the 577
constituencies of the French parliamentary election of 2007.
Keywords: Median voter
, Elections
, Two round ballot
, Electoral system
, Party competition
, Forecasting errors
, Elections forecasts