Jacob Jaffe, MIT Political Science PhD candidate, conducts novel field experiments to gather highly detailed information on local, state, and federal elections and analyzes this trove with advanced statistical techniques. He hopes to help understand and improve the voting system in the United States, and ultimately boost voter confidence.
DJ MORNING BRIEFING - USA/Asien Der Markt-Überblick am Morgen, zusammengestellt von Dow Jones Newswires: +++++ TAGESTHEMA +++++ Chinas Notenbank hat ihren Leitzins unverändert gelassen.
in the forecast. and as you know, anderson, that could change some people s voting behavior, anderson. amara walker, appreciate it. you can join cnn for live coverage of the primary races tomorrow night 7:00 p.m. the polls close across the states, so we ll be busy from the start. up next, history made today in new york city, and it has to do with that thing you see on the screen there. kids, in case you don t know what that is, just ask your parents or just stick around. the more information i found, got me more curious.
mccormick and barnette. but for months, i ve been talking to you about this, i ve been hearing this resistance from voters, mostly undecided voters who said to me this guy from out of state, he s a talk show host. i don t know why he s running. i had a very interesting call with a gentleman named bruce fine just before i got on the air this morning pipe texted him asking him what he did. he told me not what i expected to do. i called him right away and said what happens. he was leaning towards bartos, but in the end, he walked in the voting booth at 7:30 p.m. and ended up voting for oz. he told me there must be some reminder that trump endorsed him. this is the behavior of voters, voting behavior is idiosyncratic. and at the end of the day, are the folks going to say there s too much noise out there, i m just going to go with trump s pick.
particular disadvantaged or minority group? yeah. that really is the central question. garrett. when i talk to experts, they say it s impossible to gerrymander in southern states without racially the voting behavior that voters currently exhibit. so it s going to come down to had a they were trying to do as well as what they effectively did. you can t really take it apart, when you have voting blocs that reliably behave in a certain way. you point out the suburbs. it s important that these fast-diversifying suburbs are critical here. and experts tell me it looked like a surgical attempt to neutralize the changing and fast-diversifying suburbs. when they looked at these plans, it looked like someone went in with an intent effort to do just that. i would commend anybody to go look at the before and after of these maps, if you look at austin, texas, for example, where you had a whole bunch of