lpetrich
Contributor
Rachel Bitecofer is back in the news again. Some months back, some people had mentioned her and her predictions in Polls And Surveys - Trump Will Lose In 2020
Rachel "The Doc" Bitecofer

(@RachelBitecofer) / Twitter - her Twitter feed has a prediction for how the states are likely to vote in 2020.
An Unsettling New Theory: There Is No Swing Voter - POLITICO
Rachel Bitcofer successfully predicted the Democrats' regaining the House in 2018, and her predictions are that Democrats are likely to add House seats, win the Presidency, and have a chance at winning the Senate.
This is what Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez meant when she once said that there are two kinds of swing voters: red-to-blue and nonvoter-to-voter. I note that because she used a version of RB's theory in her run for office. Instead of only campaigning against opponent Joe Crowley, she sought out new voters, and she got a 68% increase in turnout.
I note that she has an interesting path to her position, studying elections and trying to predict them. In her youth, she was a Grateful Dead fan, and she read the New York Times between shows. She ended up in a dead-end administrative job with a Republican polling firm in Eugene, Oregon, but one day she heard Rachel Maddow mention that she has a political-science degree. "Wait, you can study politics?" she thought to herself, and she went to some colleges and universities to study that subject, eventually graduating and getting some university and think-tank jobs.
Rachel "The Doc" Bitecofer
An Unsettling New Theory: There Is No Swing Voter - POLITICO
Rachel Bitcofer successfully predicted the Democrats' regaining the House in 2018, and her predictions are that Democrats are likely to add House seats, win the Presidency, and have a chance at winning the Senate.
Bitecoferâs theory, when you boil it down, is that modern American elections are rarely shaped by voters changing their minds, but rather by shifts in who decides to vote in the first place. To her critics, sheâs an extreme apostle of the old saw that âturnout explains everything,â taking a long victory lap after getting lucky one time. She sees things slightly differently: That the last few elections show that American politics really has changed, and other experts have been slow to process what it means.
This is what Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez meant when she once said that there are two kinds of swing voters: red-to-blue and nonvoter-to-voter. I note that because she used a version of RB's theory in her run for office. Instead of only campaigning against opponent Joe Crowley, she sought out new voters, and she got a 68% increase in turnout.
The big upset event that got her started was the Tea Party's victory in 2010 - it made the House Republican again only two years after the seemingly decisive repudiation of that party in 2008. Obama won again in 2012, though the Senate became Republican in 2014.The classic view is that the pool of American voters is basically fixed: About 55 percent of eligible voters are likely to go to the polls, and the winner is determined by the 15 percent or so of âswing votersâ who flit between the parties. So a general election campaign amounts to a long effort to pull those voters in to your side.
Bitecofer has a nickname for this view. She calls it, with disdain, the âChuck Todd theory of American politicsâ: âThe idea that there is this informed, engaged American population that is watching these political events and watching their elected leaders and assessing their behavior and making a judgment.â
âAnd it is just not true.â
I note that she has an interesting path to her position, studying elections and trying to predict them. In her youth, she was a Grateful Dead fan, and she read the New York Times between shows. She ended up in a dead-end administrative job with a Republican polling firm in Eugene, Oregon, but one day she heard Rachel Maddow mention that she has a political-science degree. "Wait, you can study politics?" she thought to herself, and she went to some colleges and universities to study that subject, eventually graduating and getting some university and think-tank jobs.