unibot
TNPer
2012 November Special Election : Analysis
How much does ideology factor into voting behavior?
How much does ideology factor into voting behavior?
Introduction
At the end of the 2012 November Special Election, I sought out to do a unique analysis using data generated from the Gameplay Alignment Test as well as publicly available voter behavior. Not all voters were willing to take the Gameplay Alignment Test, but the reduction of them from the analysis is not anticipated to establish a significant bias (4 additional voters out of 35). I am -not- a statistician, I am first and foremost a student political scientist simply interested in a rudimentary empirical guide to ideological voter behavior -- thus, take my results with a grain of salt.
Analysis
Voters in the 2012 November Special Election on The Gameplay Alignment Test:
Note: Blue for Tim, Red for Mcmasterdonia, Orange for Kingborough, Yellow for Blue Wolf and Green for Romanoffia.
On the onset, one may as well conclude that ideology did not absolutely determine voter behavior by any means -- there were other factors at play. The 2012 November Special Election would have looked vastly different if voters had chosen their "ideologically ideal" candidate. Every voter's ideologically ideal candidate was determined by noting the candidate with the closest difference to the ideological scores (both R/D and R/C) to them.
For example, if we take example myself, Unibot (-18, -13). The difference between my scores and Mcmasterdonia ( -2, 4.5) is -16, -17.5; if these two differences are "neutralized" with ?X2 and then added together, the sum is 33.5. This same result for Tim (-8.5, -9.5) is 13, Romanoffia (-9, 3 ) is 25, Blue Wolf (14, 1) is 46 and Kingborough (-3,-4) is 24. The lowest sum (13) reflects my ideologically preferred candidate and nearest candidate to me on the Gameplay Alignment Compass: Tim. Obviously, my less ideal candidates range as the following from most to least: Kingborough, Romanoffia, Mcmasterdonia and Blue Wolf. Largely speaking, I myself am an ideological voter, since I would personally say that this reflects my ordinal ranking of the candidates in what order I would vote for them.
Despite my ideological convictions however, largely speaking voters did not chose their "ideal" ideological candidate. Thus, if one repeats my method for determining the ideological ideal candidate for every voter, they will find that the "predicted" election would be thoroughly unrealistic, as shown:
Obviously, there are some notable differences. For one thing, the winner of this ideological election would be the least preferred candidate in the actual election and the worst performer in this ideological election is the most preferred candidate in the actual election. It's essentially inverted results.
From this we can determine some candidate strengths and weaknesses:
Strengths: Mcmasterdonia made -huge- gains by capturing the ideological centre of The North Pacific away from Kingborough and the centre-right away from Blue Wolf, while also drawing in the prototypical "old guard" of The North Pacific which could have been predicted to go to their Regionalist counterpart, Romanoffia; Tim faired better than expected by mainly protecting the ideological far-left from opponents such as Romanoffia and Kingborough. Overall, Mcmasterdonia managed to unite the centre and the right against the far-left.
Weaknesses: Kingborough was obviously unable to hold his ideological advantage against Mcmasterdonia.
Although there are huge disparities between the "Ideal Vote" and the "Real Vote", do note: 61% of voters did not sacrifice more than 2 ideological points (on the Gameplay Alignment Test) from their ideal candidate's R/D value (this is to say the candidate with the closest R/D value), R/C values were demonstrably less valuable to the 61% of voters who sacrificed more than 2 ideological points difference from their ideal candidate's R/C value (this is to say the candidate with the closest R/C value). Where voters cared the most ideologically (military ideology), Mcmasterdonia and Kingborough were virtually identical at a mere point away, thus this was well within a window of compromise for Kingborough's theoretical base of support who favored Mcmasterdonia's credentials.
Conclusions
I interpret the following data as suggesting that how a candidate aligns, Raider or Defender can play a key role in how a vote turns out, but only on a secondary level. One could predict for example, that neither Tim nor Blue Wolf would have likely won the Election due to both facing a steep disadvantage in trying to ideologically "pinch" the middle where more competitive candidates such as Mcmasterdonia and Kingborough were strategically placed.
However, it is likely that voters are willing to sacrifice minor ideological disparities on the basis of leader perception and experience which I would posit as the downfall of Kingborough. Although Kingborough would theoretically resonate closer with most voters in The North Pacific by closely mirroring the average Gameplay Alignment in The North Pacific (-2.6, -2.6), the moderate defenderist-regionalist, Mcmasterdonia had to rely on his experience as Minister of Defense and others' leader perceptions of him to swoon the very moderately defenderist-cosmopolitan political centre with a political performance that focused on culture and civility policies that mirrored Kingborough's platform, while also maintaining the moderate defenderist-regionalist status quo from Eluvatar's regime on highly controversial issues such as military and WA affairs policy.
The downfall of Blue Wolf is less clear, one possibility is that he simply alienated himself from the centre-right by seeming like a niche choice with no electoral prospect -- so much that his base of support turned to their second ideal candidate, Mcmasterdonia. An alternative possibility is that centre-right voters felt threatened by the idea of Tim, the far-left candidate, being elected as his campaign was legitimized with incumbency, so they voted strategically with the front-runner and their second ideal candidate, Mcmasterdonia. These said possibilities are not mutually-exclusive. However, far-left voters in the defenderist camp did not appear to estimate the threat to their candidate, Tim, or alternatively, saw the emerging electoral unsuccess of Kingborough and Romanoffia and bet their electoral success on Tim -- his support base, solidly in the far-left was built on those in the far-left and from the edge of Kingborough's less moderate voters who were dissatisfied or alienated by the electoral juggernaut, Mcmasterdonia, who had already by that time conquered the centre and the centre-left rather decisively. This was however a strictly good play of demographics with the centre under control, Mcmasterdonia dominated the centre-left and drawed enough from the right to win the Election handily without the support of the far-left -- thus during this Election, the far-left was largely left alienated.
Ultimately, a good candidate under these demographics to remain competitive against Mcmasterdonia in a future election would need to 1) have the appropriate leadership perception, 2) the experience in The North Pacific and 3) be strategically placed in the -2.6, -2.6 corner where the demographics are favorable and Mcmasterdonia is most hindered from capturing the centre-left. In a race where Mcmasterdonia was blocked from the centre-left by such a challenger, the demographics would simply not work in his favor although it would be a pressured tight-finish -- the centre and the right altogether cannot beat out the centre-left and the far-left without a third candidate to split the left. In other words: Hileville for Delegate 2013!
- Unibot