A Presidential Election Game, 2012 Edition
Dr. Joseph F. Kolacinski, Assistant ProfessorElmira College, United Statesjkolacinski@elmira.edu
Nick R. MercierElmira College, United Statesnmercier11@elmira.edu
Ashley CulpepperElmira College, United Statesaculpepper12@elmira.edu
I. Introduction
The purpose of this game is to simulate a United States presidential election with two players, one managing the Democratic Party and the other the GOP. The player will choose the candidates and decide on a weekly basis how to allocate campaign funds among the states. They will be able to check their candidates' standings in the polls and use this to determine their future campaign decisions.
Prior to the party conventions, the standings between the two parties are balanced. The breakdown of the states is as follows.
Strongly Democratic ( Polls: 55% to 45%) Eight states, 108 Electoral Votes
California, Connecticutt, D.C., Hawaii, Illinois, Maine, Massachusetts, and Rhode Island.
Leaning Democratic (Polls: 51.5% to 48.5%) Seven states, 87 Electoral Votes
Delaware, Maryland, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Vermont, and Washington.
Barely Democratic (Polls: 50.5% to 49.5%) Seven states, 74 Electoral Votes
Minnesota, New Hampshire, New Mexico, Ohio, Oregon, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Barely Republican (Polls: 49.5% to 50.5%) Eight states, 74 Electoral Votes
Arkansas, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Missouri, Montana, Nevada, and West Virginia.
Leaning Republican (Polls: 48.5% to 51.5%) Eight states, 87 Electoral Votes
Alabama, Arizona, Georgia, Idaho, Louisiana, North Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia.
Strongly Republican (Polls: 45% to 55%) Thirteen states, 108 Electoral Votes
Alaska, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Mississippi, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma, South Carolina, South Dakota, Texas, Utah, and Wyoming.
Electoral College Standings
Map adapted by Dr. Kolacinski from the original at <http://www.electoral-vote.com/evp2004/info/blank_map.png>.
II. The Party Conventions
Prior to the official start of the campaign season around Labor Day, the parties hold primaries and conventions to choose their Presidential and Vice Presidential nominees. Each player will choose the nominees for his or her party. Each candidate has certain advantages and disadvantages depending upon where he or she might be popular or unpopular; for example, the polls will move in favor of a candidate in his or her home state.
Because the 2012 Republican convention will be held first, the Republican player will choose first. The available candidates for the Republican nominations are Sarah Palin (Governor, Alaska), Mitt Romney (Governor, Massachusetts), Tim Pawlenty (Governor, Minnesota), Bobby Jindal (Governor, Louisiana), Jon Huntsman (Governor, Utah), Ron Paul (Representative, Texas), Michele Bachmann (Representative, Minnesota), Rick Santorum (Senator, Pennsylvania), Herman Cain (Businessman, Georgia), Rick Perry (Governor, Texas), Newt Gingrich (Representative, Texas), Abraham Lincoln (Representative, Illinois), Ulysses S. Grant (General, Illinois), Teddy Roosevelt (Vice-President, New York), and Dwight Eisenhower (General, Kansas).
Enter one of the following codes to choose your Presidential (GOPP) and Vice-Presidential (GOPVP) candidates.
Palin, Romney, Pawlenty, Jindal, Huntsman, Paul, Bachmann, Santorum, Cain, Perry, Gingrich, Lincoln, Grant, TRoosevelt, Eisenhower
Now enter the following line to apply the changes to the polling data relevant to your candidate choices.
Now it's the Democratic player's turn. The Candidates that you may choose from are the following. Barack Obama (Senator, Illinois), Joe Biden (Senator, Delaware), Al Gore (Vice-President, Tennessee), Kathleen Sebelius (Governor, Kansas), Hillary Clinton (Senator, New York), Evan Bayh (Senator, Indiana), Tom Vilsack (Governor, Iowa), Tim Kaine (Governor, Virginia), Kay Hagan (Senator, North Carolina), Brian Schweitzer (Governor, Montana), Janet Napolitano (Governor, Arizona), Andrew Jackson (General, Tennessee), Martin VanBuren (Vice-President, New York), Franklin Roosevelt (Governor, New York) and John F. Kennedy (Senator, Massachusetts).
Enter one of the following codes to choose your Presidential (DEMP) and Vice-Presidential (DEMVP) candidates.
Obama, Biden, Gore, Sebelius, HClinton, Bayh, Vilsack, Kaine, Hagan, Schweitzer, Napolitano, Jackson, VanBuren, FDR, JFK
III. Campaign Season
Now enter the following line to view the changes to the polling data relevant to your candidate choices.
Game play will proceed as follows. Each player has 100 million dollars of campaign funds to allocate each week. These funds cannot be carried over into the following week, so it is in the player's best interest to use as much of their funding as possible per turn. The cost of campaigning in each state is roughly proportional to the state's population and is listed below.
When you campaign in a state, the polls in that state will shift. You can gain up to an additional 1.5% in your polls in that state, but it's also possible that something you do offends the state's voters. To reflect this, there is a chance to instead lose up to 0.5% each time you campaign in a state.
One note regarding strategy; in actual presidential elections, candidates rarely campaign in the states that are leaning strongly in one direction or the other. In this game it is possible, but difficult, to move these states from strong support to a roughly toss-up status. If the players' goal is to model something approaching a realistic presidential campaign, they should focus their attention on states in the "leaning" and "barely" categories.
Costs of campaigning in each state
Initially "Strongly Democratic" States
California $53,000,000 Illinois $18,000,000
Connecticut $5,000,000 Maine $2,000,000
DC $1,000,000 Massachusetts $9,000,000
Hawaii $2,000,000 Rhode Island $2,000,000
Initially "Leaning Democratic" States
Delaware $1,000,000 New York $27,000,000 Maryland $8,000,000 Vermont $1,000,000 Michigan $14,000,000 Washington $10,000,000
New Jersey $12,000,000
Initially "Barely Democratic" States
Minnesota $8,000,000 Oregon $5,000,000
New Hampshire $2,000,000 Pennsylvania $18,000,000
New Mexico $3,000,000 Wisconsin $8,000,000
Ohio $16,000,000
Initially "Barely Republican" States
Arkansas $4,000,000 Missouri $8,000,000
Colorado $7,000,000 Montana $1,000,000
Florida $27,000,000 Nevada $4,000,000 Iowa $4,000,000 West Virginia $3,000,000
Initially "Leaning Republican" States
Alabama $7,000,000 Louisiana $6,000,000
Arizona $9,000,000 North Carolina $13,000,000
Georgia $14,000,000 Tennessee $9,000,000
Idaho $2,000,000 Virginia $11,000,000
Initially "Strongly Republican" States
Alaska $1,000,000 Oklahoma $5,000,000
Indiana $9,000,000 South Carolina $7,000,000
Kansas $4,000,000 South Dakota $1,000,000
Kentucky $6,000,000 Texas $36,000,000
Mississippi $4,000,000 Utah $4,000,000
Nebraska $3,000,000 Wyoming $1,000,000
North Dakota $1,000,000
Electoral College Standings (PreConvention)
A printable handout with the above information, as well as a player's worksheet for tracking campaign choices and results, can be found on the internet at <http://faculty.elmira.edu/jkolacinski/research.html>.
Once you decide on the states that you want to campaign in, you need to fund your campaigns. For each week of the campaign, expand the appropriate cell and enter a list of the states that you want to campaign in. Each state should be entered spelled out, with each word capitalized but no spaces between words. Make sure that your spelling is correct. As an example, if the Federalist party wanted to campaign in California, The District of Columbia, Ohio and New Jersey, their funding command would look like this.
> FEDFund := [California, DistrictofColumbia, Ohio, NewJersey];
Week 1: The Second Week of September
Democratic Campaign
Republican Campaign
Before you can start to campaign, you need to check to see if you can afford the campaign schedule that you've entered above. Don't forget that you can't carry funds over to subsequent weeks, so you want to get as close as you can to $100 million without going over.
Once your funding is approved you can execute your campaign for the week below. An updated list of poll results will follow.
Campaign Command
Recall that you can minimize this cell to make it easier to cut and paste fund commands from week to week.
Week 2: The Third Week of September
Week 3: The Fourth Week of September
Week 4: The First Week of October
Week 5: The Second Week of October
Week 6: The Third Week of October
Week 7: The Fourth Week of October
Week 8: The First Week of November
IV. Election Day
In this section, you simply need to click inside each cell and hit the "enter" key to execute the general election in that state. The elections are listed in the order that the last polls close in that state. Once a candidate reaches 270 electoral votes, he or she is elected President, but you can continue the election to see how you did all across the country.
If you would like to see your election results on an electoral map, there are many good electoral college calculators on line. One nice option can be found at the 270 to win website at <http://www.270towin.com/>.
7:00 EST Poll Closings
Polls start closing at 6 pm eastern in parts of Kentucky and Indiana. By 7 pm eastern, polls are completely closed in all of six states. Please click inside each execution cell below and hit the enter key, the election results for that state will become available. Most of these states lean Republican, so you can expect that candidate to get off to an early lead.
Be careful not to re-run the election in any state.
7:30 EST Poll Closings
8:00 EST Poll Closings
8:30 EST Poll Closings
9:00 EST Poll Closings
10:00 EST Poll Closings
11:00 EST Poll Closings
1:00 EST Poll Closings
Teachers' Notes
The cost structure for campaigning in the various states is obviously a simplistic one, the cost is $1,000,000 per seat in the House of Representatives. This illustrates an important characteristic of the Electoral College, the "small state bias." In reality, because of the differences in the ratio of voters to electoral votes it is more cost effective to campaign in the small states. It is this small state bias that creates the possibility of an "electoral inversion" where one candidate wins the popular vote but the other wins the electoral college and therefore the election.
The initial poll standings are based on the average margin of victory in each state for the 1992 through 2008 Presidential Elections. States were shifted, generally to the right, so that the number of electoral votes in each category (eg. Strong Republican, Leaning Republican, etc...) are exactly balanced out. The poll numbers chosen for each state are set to make everything at least somewhat competitive and so certain standings, like those in DC or Utah are far from realistic.
If you want to try to use this game with an actual set of poll numbers you can edit the poll numbers in start up code section (This will require you to restart the MAPLE server). These are defined in the "SetPolls" process and look like this: FloridaPolls := .495. The number entered is the relative strength of the Democratic candidate compared to the Republican candidate so to enter your own poll, you should replace each number with the result of the following calculation.
The electoral college numbers are entered in the SetElectionData process as lower case state abbreviations, such as "ny" for New York. To model a historical election, you can change these values to the appropriate numbers. If you are modeling an election and have entered your own poll numbers DO NOT execute the DemocraticCandidates() and RepublicanCandidates() processes.
One bit of accuracy that was sacrificed for the sake of playability is the relative funds that were available to the candidates. In reality one side probably has a funding advantage over the other. For example in 2008, the Obama campaign was much better funded than the McCain campaign. If you'd like to play the game under these circumstances, you can open the startup code, find the BudgetCheck process and locate the two places where the line
if WeeklyExpenditureDEM <= 100 then print...
appears and change the values to numbers of your choosing.
Instructors should notice that historical candidates are allowed as choices, but recall that the initial poll standings are based on modern strengths of the Democratic and Republican parties. Because of this some odd and possibly disconcerting results will occur, such as Abraham Lincoln doing well in the south. Such results should lead to discussions, for example, of the 1860 election and of how the parties and the regions of the country have changed over the years.
The fifty-one state elections generated on Election Day are randomly determined based on the poll numbers after the eighth week of campaigning. Elections are simulated using roughly 1000 voters, approximating the margin of error of most opinion polls. Because these elections are randomly generated, the candidate leading in the polls in a state may not win that state and identical sets of poll results can lead to different winning candidates.
Acknowledgements
This application was created using MAPLE 11 and MAPLE 14. It is an updated version of "A Presidential Election Game, 2008 Edition." Work on the original game was started in the Elmira College class "A Mathematician Looks At American History," MAT 1940. The initial game and the revisions that created the 2012 version were completed as part of the Elmira College Summer Research Program in 2010 and 2011. The game was inspired, in part, by a game called "The Next President" that one of the authors played in junior high school in 1977. Readers interested in tracking and simulating elections are encouraged to seek out the many good websites on the topic during the next election cycle. Among these are <www.fivethirtyeight.com> and <www.electoral-vote.com>.
Thanks go to our "play testers," Marcia Metcalf, Dan Bastardo, Sara Kleinick, Dr. Joanne Redden and Dr. Jim Twombly. Additional thanks go to Ms. Metcalf and Dr. Twombly for their many, helpful suggestions.
References
Kolacinski, J.F., Mercier, N. "A Presidential Election Game, 2008 Edition". MapleSoft Application Center.
http://www.maplesoft.com/applications/view.aspx?SID=89943
Saari, Donald G. Chaotic Elections! A Mathematician Looks at Voting. Amercian Mathematical Society. 2001.
http://www.cnn.com/ELECTION/2008/poll.closing/ accessed on 11 June 2010http://www.electoral-vote.com/evp2004/info/blank_map.png accessed on 14 June 2010
http://query.nictusa.com/cgi-bin/cancomsrs/?_08+00+PR accessed on 30 June 2010
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_states_and_blue_states accessed on 15 June 2011
Many individual election and biography pages at Wikipedia such as:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/United_States_presidential_election,_1860 and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Janet_Napolitano
Legal Notice: © 2011, J. F. Kolacinski, N. Mercier, A. Culpepper and Maplesoft, a division of Waterloo Maple Inc. Maplesoft and Maple are trademarks of Waterloo Maple Inc. Neither Maplesoft nor the authors are responsible for any errors contained within and are not liable for any damages resulting from the use of this material. This application is intended for non-commercial, non-profit use only. Contact the authors for permission if you wish to use this application in for-profit activities.