Author Topic: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.  (Read 49433 times)

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #340 on: June 13, 2022, 04:10:26 PM »
And the trend is consistent across all other opinion polls

Compare all opinion polls from Feb to June. In all the polls, Rao was trailing in Feb. In all the polls in May/June, Rao is now leading.

Clear reversal.


Reversal is right there in June. Rao ahead.


Okay lets even give the highest probative value to these opinion polls;
Show me how they have reversed. :D :D

I think you're trying to use data to believe your own theory :)

Let start with Radio Africa
Radio Africa.
March - Raila had 47 percent - Ruto had 43 percent

Move to April - Ruto lead 45 - 41


Move to May - Ruto 43 - Raila 41


And now got june - Ruto drop 38 - and Raila 45.


Tightening of polls, i agree, happens all the time as election day approaches and as candidates become clear.

What we have here is not just tightening (gap btn no 1 and 2 narrowing).

What we have is a reversal of the order of preferred candidate with the previous no 2 having overtaken no 1. Across all polls in the last month. Very different from tightening.

As to what has caused the reversal, again we can argue whether it is karua, gachagua, mdvd etc. But it doesnt change the fact that polls have reversed, not tightened.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #341 on: June 13, 2022, 04:20:17 PM »
I think you're hopeless. So in March when Raila was 47 and Ruto was 43 percent - what was that - Clear reversal?
And the trend is consistent across all other opinion polls

Compare all opinion polls from Feb to June. In all the polls, Rao was trailing in Feb. In all the polls in May/June, Rao is now leading.

Clear reversal.


Reversal is right there in June. Rao ahead.


Okay lets even give the highest probative value to these opinion polls;
Show me how they have reversed. :D :D

I think you're trying to use data to believe your own theory :)

Let start with Radio Africa
Radio Africa.
March - Raila had 47 percent - Ruto had 43 percent

Move to April - Ruto lead 45 - 41


Move to May - Ruto 43 - Raila 41


And now got june - Ruto drop 38 - and Raila 45.


Tightening of polls, i agree, happens all the time as election day approaches and as candidates become clear.

What we have here is not just tightening (gap btn no 1 and 2 narrowing).

What we have is a reversal of the order of preferred candidate with the previous no 2 having overtaken no 1. Across all polls in the last month. Very different from tightening.

As to what has caused the reversal, again we can argue whether it is karua, gachagua, mdvd etc. But it doesnt change the fact that polls have reversed, not tightened.

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #342 on: June 13, 2022, 04:33:09 PM »
Look at the trend across time. Not just one data point.

Also look at all other polls. Pull them up and see same trend.

July is coming up. If these polls are anything to go by, wsr better find a way if arresting this trend. Otherwise it will snowball.




I think you're hopeless. So in March when Raila was 47 and Ruto was 43 percent - what was that - Clear reversal?
And the trend is consistent across all other opinion polls

Compare all opinion polls from Feb to June. In all the polls, Rao was trailing in Feb. In all the polls in May/June, Rao is now leading.

Clear reversal.


Reversal is right there in June. Rao ahead.


Okay lets even give the highest probative value to these opinion polls;
Show me how they have reversed. :D :D

I think you're trying to use data to believe your own theory :)

Let start with Radio Africa
Radio Africa.
March - Raila had 47 percent - Ruto had 43 percent

Move to April - Ruto lead 45 - 41


Move to May - Ruto 43 - Raila 41


And now got june - Ruto drop 38 - and Raila 45.


Tightening of polls, i agree, happens all the time as election day approaches and as candidates become clear.

What we have here is not just tightening (gap btn no 1 and 2 narrowing).

What we have is a reversal of the order of preferred candidate with the previous no 2 having overtaken no 1. Across all polls in the last month. Very different from tightening.

As to what has caused the reversal, again we can argue whether it is karua, gachagua, mdvd etc. But it doesnt change the fact that polls have reversed, not tightened.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #343 on: June 13, 2022, 04:43:48 PM »
We've been here before - MOASS is only one that will be accurate
Look at the trend across time. Not just one data point.

Also look at all other polls. Pull them up and see same trend.

July is coming up. If these polls are anything to go by, wsr better find a way if arresting this trend. Otherwise it will snowball.

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #344 on: June 13, 2022, 06:27:58 PM »
The Star now reporting that wsr is now polling under 50pc in central kenya.  Momentum.

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #345 on: June 13, 2022, 06:36:22 PM »
Wsr 49pc; rao 29pc.

If the rest vote in the same ratio, this translates to wsr getting 63pc and rao 37pc.

And still 2 months to go.


The Star now reporting that wsr is now polling under 50pc in central kenya.  Momentum.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #346 on: June 13, 2022, 07:21:04 PM »
Hope sprints eternal
Again according to this poll- Raila has no momentum in Central.
It's Wajackoyah who has taken 4 percent :) from Ruto
In fact in march - Raila was 32 percent.

The only momentum that is going on is by one Prof Wajackoyah.
Considering  Wajackoyah is more credible candidate than Martha (who got 43K)
I see this momentos :) lasting for a month
Much longer than Martha two weeks.

Wsr 49pc; rao 29pc.

If the rest vote in the same ratio, this translates to wsr getting 63pc and rao 37pc.

And still 2 months to go.


The Star now reporting that wsr is now polling under 50pc in central kenya.  Momentum.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #347 on: June 13, 2022, 07:26:25 PM »
In fact if you look at historical data - Ruto numbers have remained constant for donkey years now - both nationally and in Central - those who will vote him - are very decided Liwe Liwalo. He has scored 50 percent plus of the decided voters for 5yrs in a row - his numbers are not changing much - because for every vote he loses in former Jubilee zones - he gains one in NASA.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #348 on: June 13, 2022, 10:42:55 PM »
What we can expect the last month is for desperados (the losing side) to try to buy opinion pollsters to create fake momentum.
Mucheru and Kibicho can barely control their bowel movements and are sharing intelligence data collected in their heads

Expect more of this kind of desperation as the d-day approaches. It will soon turn into we will not hand over or hand over to military or any other desperation.

If you're winning - you stay calm - you dont jump like a toad daytime.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #349 on: June 14, 2022, 11:09:29 AM »
As we wait for final certified figures; numbers look like this.

The presidential election projection.

Ruto - 53-54%
Raila - 45-46%
Wajackoyah -1%
Mwaura - 0.3%

The Parliament, Senate and Governors Projection

Parliament Senate Gov
UDA 182 27 26
ODM 63 11 5
JUBILEE 26 3 4
WIPER 18 3 4
ANC 12 0 2
FORDK 9 1 2
KANU 2 1 0
KK(affl) 7 0 0
AZ(affl)- 17 1 4
336 47 47
UDA Nom 7 12
ODM Nom 3 5
JUBILEE Nom 1 2
WIPER Nom 1 2
SPEAKER(KK) 1 1
349 69 47

Offline Nowayhaha

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #350 on: June 14, 2022, 11:23:53 AM »

Wajackoyah might get 3% overall.

As we wait for final certified figures; numbers look like this.

The presidential election projection.

Ruto - 53-54%
Raila - 45-46%
Wajackoyah -1%
Mwaura - 0.3%

The Parliament, Senate and Governors Projection

Parliament Senate Gov
UDA 182 27 26
ODM 63 11 5
JUBILEE 26 3 4
WIPER 18 3 4
ANC 12 0 2
FORDK 9 1 2
KANU 2 1 0
KK(affl) 7 0 0
AZ(affl)- 17 1 4
336 47 47
UDA Nom 7 12
ODM Nom 3 5
JUBILEE Nom 1 2
WIPER Nom 1 2
SPEAKER(KK) 1 1
349 69 47

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #351 on: June 14, 2022, 12:02:29 PM »
3% ni ngori but possible - that is more than half a million votes;
1% will be about 150K.
If he get 10 votes in each polling station; he'd be doing 500K.
Let see if he can sustain the momentum he has...or it will fizzle out like abduba dida.

Wajackoyah might get 3% overall.


Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #352 on: June 14, 2022, 12:36:04 PM »
Let me keep this for August.

Meantime, mt kenya propaganda that azimio is a karua-igathe sucession plan for the region.



As we wait for final certified figures; numbers look like this.

The presidential election projection.

Ruto - 53-54%
Raila - 45-46%
Wajackoyah -1%
Mwaura - 0.3%

The Parliament, Senate and Governors Projection

Parliament Senate Gov
UDA 182 27 26
ODM 63 11 5
JUBILEE 26 3 4
WIPER 18 3 4
ANC 12 0 2
FORDK 9 1 2
KANU 2 1 0
KK(affl) 7 0 0
AZ(affl)- 17 1 4
336 47 47
UDA Nom 7 12
ODM Nom 3 5
JUBILEE Nom 1 2
WIPER Nom 1 2
SPEAKER(KK) 1 1
349 69 47

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #353 on: June 14, 2022, 12:44:19 PM »
MOASS will be out next week - final final - and then we wait.

Politics is about trust. It's not a rational exercise. It why all sort of characters get elected. As long as there is huge deficit of trust - on Uhuru and Raila - nobody is listening - leave alone changing their mind.
Check your data. Raila in march was doing 32 percent according to The Start poll - now he is down to 20 percent. Wajackoyah has gone up to 4 percent in GEMA.

For you to undo what Ruto has done the last almost 15yrs since 2009 in a month is impossibility.

It's not for lack of trying - Uhuru has thrown everything the last 5yrs - nothing has worked.

If Uhuru had personally stuck his neck out and gone to GEMA with Raila - I had forseen him getting 35 percent. Uhuru at least has some trust left.

Martha has been opposite GEMA mainstream thinking for 15yrs - selling Raila who has been barraged by negative propaganda for 60yrs!!!!!!!!

Martha herself need to be sold :) back to GEMA - and even in Kirinyanga she is getting no traction. For most people in GEMA - she is just oppositionist who will be opposed to the community consensus.

My estimate = Ruto will score 85 percent of GEMA - except in Meru and possibly Kiambu.

Meantime, mt kenya propaganda that azimio is a karua-igathe sucession plan for the region.

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #354 on: June 14, 2022, 01:44:15 PM »
Will be waiting.

While i may hold divergent perspectives on the race, i must say i appreciate your boldness in stating your stand and backing it up with diligent analysis county by county. Not many have that in them

MOASS will be out next week - final final - and then we wait.

Politics is about trust. It's not a rational exercise. It why all sort of characters get elected. As long as there is huge deficit of trust - on Uhuru and Raila - nobody is listening - leave alone changing their mind.
Check your data. Raila in march was doing 32 percent according to The Start poll - now he is down to 20 percent. Wajackoyah has gone up to 4 percent in GEMA.

For you to undo what Ruto has done the last almost 15yrs since 2009 in a month is impossibility.

It's not for lack of trying - Uhuru has thrown everything the last 5yrs - nothing has worked.

If Uhuru had personally stuck his neck out and gone to GEMA with Raila - I had forseen him getting 35 percent. Uhuru at least has some trust left.

Martha has been opposite GEMA mainstream thinking for 15yrs - selling Raila who has been barraged by negative propaganda for 60yrs!!!!!!!!

Martha herself need to be sold :) back to GEMA - and even in Kirinyanga she is getting no traction. For most people in GEMA - she is just oppositionist who will be opposed to the community consensus.

My estimate = Ruto will score 85 percent of GEMA - except in Meru and possibly Kiambu.

Meantime, mt kenya propaganda that azimio is a karua-igathe sucession plan for the region.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #355 on: June 14, 2022, 01:50:12 PM »
Prof Charles Horsnby who does a great job has released an update.

He gives Ruto a narrow win of 51 versus 49 percent.
http://www.charleshornsby.com/kenya-blog





Latest Predictions
12/6/20220 Comments
 
In the presidential election race, Raila Odinga's selection of Martha Karua as running mate in mid-May helped his campaign in the short term (while Ruto's choice of Gachagua focused on protecting his Mount Kenya strength and added little nationwide) but I'm still giving victory to "outsider" (yet simultaneously Deputy President) William Ruto by a narrow margin: 51-49. Recent polls have suggested a growing Raila lead but there are substantial methodological challenges in accurate Kenyan polling (which Tom Wolf has outlined in https://www.theelephant.info/op-eds/2022/05/24/why-opinion-polls-may-not-always-predict-election-outcomes-in-kenya/). Also, I suspect the large numbers of allegedly undecided or "prefer not to say" respondents will break (narrowly) for Ruto, as the state's open backing for Raila over Ruto disincentivizes complete honestly.
?
County by county, its neck and neck.  I'm calling 18 for Ruto with a substantial majority (60-40 or more) and 17 for Raila, with five each as closer wins and two (Lamu and Kajiado) unclear for me still. The Kikuyu vote remains key to Ruto's success and I don't believe Karua will make a big dent in that in the end for Raila, but if she does, Azimio will win. Much also depends on how the battle for the Mulembe nation proceeds. The media seem generally to favour Raila's chances in Western but the feedback from the ground is less conclusive. I've given four of the five Luhya dominated counties narrowly to Ruto (while I see Busia as strongly ODM) but a larger majority (as Mudavadi and Wetang'ula have promised) would seal Ruto's victory and a defeat would make his path to State House very hard. With Kalonzo Musyoka's deliberate "spoiling" of his presidential bid to reluctantly rejoin Raila and most independents and minor candidates failing to meet the tougher IEBC qualification hurdle,  I see no chance at all of a run off.
Picture
For visual clarity, Raila's Azimio is now coloured purple (since they are using both Red (Jubilee) and Blue (Azimio) as campaign colours), with Raila's orange still in the mix in his heartlands. UDA branding remains yellow, combined with green in Kenya Kwanza campaign materials
In the gubernatorial races - for many Kenyans just as important as the presidential race - the scales tilt slightly in Azimio's favour. I'm calling 24 for Azimio overall and 20 for Kenya Kwanza, with 3 unclear. This is because Jubilee has some locally important leaders (such as Ephraim Maina in NyerI) who have a chance of victory under their own brand without sending many votes Raila's way. I haven't calculated the Senatorial or Women representatives results yet but I expect them to be similar but with slightly more party ticket voting.

In Parliament, among the 290 elected MPs, today I'm calling 136 (47%) for Kenya Kwanza, 118 (41%) for Azimio and 36 (12%) not clear, favouring unaligned independents or (most common) seats I haven't reviewed in enough detail. Those will break I think for Azimio as they include several Western and Gusii seats where ODM should do well, plus some Northern and North-Eastern seats where Ruto does not have a strong candidate.*  So, again, overall, very close. In this election, everything matters.
* Ruto appears to be performing slightly better in the mostly Moslem Upper East/North East, but political party is of limited importance in this area and ethnicity and clan alliances tend to dominate voter decisions. Even where he has strong candidates, it may not convert into presidential ballots

Offline Tactician

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #356 on: June 14, 2022, 05:18:45 PM »
Interesting. Surprised that western has turned wsr. He gives wsr a lead in bungoma and kakamega.

Prof Charles Horsnby who does a great job has released an update.

He gives Ruto a narrow win of 51 versus 49 percent.
http://www.charleshornsby.com/kenya-blog





Latest Predictions
12/6/20220 Comments
 
In the presidential election race, Raila Odinga's selection of Martha Karua as running mate in mid-May helped his campaign in the short term (while Ruto's choice of Gachagua focused on protecting his Mount Kenya strength and added little nationwide) but I'm still giving victory to "outsider" (yet simultaneously Deputy President) William Ruto by a narrow margin: 51-49. Recent polls have suggested a growing Raila lead but there are substantial methodological challenges in accurate Kenyan polling (which Tom Wolf has outlined in https://www.theelephant.info/op-eds/2022/05/24/why-opinion-polls-may-not-always-predict-election-outcomes-in-kenya/). Also, I suspect the large numbers of allegedly undecided or "prefer not to say" respondents will break (narrowly) for Ruto, as the state's open backing for Raila over Ruto disincentivizes complete honestly.
?
County by county, its neck and neck.  I'm calling 18 for Ruto with a substantial majority (60-40 or more) and 17 for Raila, with five each as closer wins and two (Lamu and Kajiado) unclear for me still. The Kikuyu vote remains key to Ruto's success and I don't believe Karua will make a big dent in that in the end for Raila, but if she does, Azimio will win. Much also depends on how the battle for the Mulembe nation proceeds. The media seem generally to favour Raila's chances in Western but the feedback from the ground is less conclusive. I've given four of the five Luhya dominated counties narrowly to Ruto (while I see Busia as strongly ODM) but a larger majority (as Mudavadi and Wetang'ula have promised) would seal Ruto's victory and a defeat would make his path to State House very hard. With Kalonzo Musyoka's deliberate "spoiling" of his presidential bid to reluctantly rejoin Raila and most independents and minor candidates failing to meet the tougher IEBC qualification hurdle,  I see no chance at all of a run off.
Picture
For visual clarity, Raila's Azimio is now coloured purple (since they are using both Red (Jubilee) and Blue (Azimio) as campaign colours), with Raila's orange still in the mix in his heartlands. UDA branding remains yellow, combined with green in Kenya Kwanza campaign materials
In the gubernatorial races - for many Kenyans just as important as the presidential race - the scales tilt slightly in Azimio's favour. I'm calling 24 for Azimio overall and 20 for Kenya Kwanza, with 3 unclear. This is because Jubilee has some locally important leaders (such as Ephraim Maina in NyerI) who have a chance of victory under their own brand without sending many votes Raila's way. I haven't calculated the Senatorial or Women representatives results yet but I expect them to be similar but with slightly more party ticket voting.

In Parliament, among the 290 elected MPs, today I'm calling 136 (47%) for Kenya Kwanza, 118 (41%) for Azimio and 36 (12%) not clear, favouring unaligned independents or (most common) seats I haven't reviewed in enough detail. Those will break I think for Azimio as they include several Western and Gusii seats where ODM should do well, plus some Northern and North-Eastern seats where Ruto does not have a strong candidate.*  So, again, overall, very close. In this election, everything matters.
* Ruto appears to be performing slightly better in the mostly Moslem Upper East/North East, but political party is of limited importance in this area and ethnicity and clan alliances tend to dominate voter decisions. Even where he has strong candidates, it may not convert into presidential ballots

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #357 on: June 14, 2022, 05:20:59 PM »
Bungoma turned WSR long time ago. Remember Bungoma at 2017 was already at 30 percent - and game there really is btw UDA & FORD-K - with Ford-K breakup DAP trying to stay afloat. Of course 10 percent are Kalenjin of Mt Elgon.

In fact there is no opinion poll I am aware of that has ever shown Raila beating Ruto in Bungoma.

Kakemega is 50-50 game. Oparanya runs the lower - Malala-Khawale run the Northern.

The same with Vihiga. The upper (Maragoli) is maDVD stronghold. The lower is Raila stronghold.

Tranzoia is slum dunk for Ruto - just like Busia is for Raila.

Interesting. Surprised that western has turned wsr. He gives wsr a lead in bungoma and kakamega.

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #358 on: June 14, 2022, 05:24:59 PM »
The part that I disagree with Charles is Coast. I think he needs to update Coast. Kwale, Kilifi and Mombasa are turning battleground if not yellow - like Kwale. Taita Taveta is an exception...and Azimio will carry the day there.

Lamu is not unclear - with 50% being Mt kenya - you can bet they will vote UDA mostly.

I agree with Kajiado - it's one that is most difficult to predict in 14 RVs.

Prof Charles Horsnby who does a great job has released an update.

He gives Ruto a narrow win of 51 versus 49 percent.
http://www.charleshornsby.com/kenya-blog





Latest Predictions
12/6/20220 Comments
 
In the presidential election race, Raila Odinga's selection of Martha Karua as running mate in mid-May helped his campaign in the short term (while Ruto's choice of Gachagua focused on protecting his Mount Kenya strength and added little nationwide) but I'm still giving victory to "outsider" (yet simultaneously Deputy President) William Ruto by a narrow margin: 51-49. Recent polls have suggested a growing Raila lead but there are substantial methodological challenges in accurate Kenyan polling (which Tom Wolf has outlined in https://www.theelephant.info/op-eds/2022/05/24/why-opinion-polls-may-not-always-predict-election-outcomes-in-kenya/). Also, I suspect the large numbers of allegedly undecided or "prefer not to say" respondents will break (narrowly) for Ruto, as the state's open backing for Raila over Ruto disincentivizes complete honestly.
?
County by county, its neck and neck.  I'm calling 18 for Ruto with a substantial majority (60-40 or more) and 17 for Raila, with five each as closer wins and two (Lamu and Kajiado) unclear for me still. The Kikuyu vote remains key to Ruto's success and I don't believe Karua will make a big dent in that in the end for Raila, but if she does, Azimio will win. Much also depends on how the battle for the Mulembe nation proceeds. The media seem generally to favour Raila's chances in Western but the feedback from the ground is less conclusive. I've given four of the five Luhya dominated counties narrowly to Ruto (while I see Busia as strongly ODM) but a larger majority (as Mudavadi and Wetang'ula have promised) would seal Ruto's victory and a defeat would make his path to State House very hard. With Kalonzo Musyoka's deliberate "spoiling" of his presidential bid to reluctantly rejoin Raila and most independents and minor candidates failing to meet the tougher IEBC qualification hurdle,  I see no chance at all of a run off.
Picture
For visual clarity, Raila's Azimio is now coloured purple (since they are using both Red (Jubilee) and Blue (Azimio) as campaign colours), with Raila's orange still in the mix in his heartlands. UDA branding remains yellow, combined with green in Kenya Kwanza campaign materials
In the gubernatorial races - for many Kenyans just as important as the presidential race - the scales tilt slightly in Azimio's favour. I'm calling 24 for Azimio overall and 20 for Kenya Kwanza, with 3 unclear. This is because Jubilee has some locally important leaders (such as Ephraim Maina in NyerI) who have a chance of victory under their own brand without sending many votes Raila's way. I haven't calculated the Senatorial or Women representatives results yet but I expect them to be similar but with slightly more party ticket voting.

In Parliament, among the 290 elected MPs, today I'm calling 136 (47%) for Kenya Kwanza, 118 (41%) for Azimio and 36 (12%) not clear, favouring unaligned independents or (most common) seats I haven't reviewed in enough detail. Those will break I think for Azimio as they include several Western and Gusii seats where ODM should do well, plus some Northern and North-Eastern seats where Ruto does not have a strong candidate.*  So, again, overall, very close. In this election, everything matters.
* Ruto appears to be performing slightly better in the mostly Moslem Upper East/North East, but political party is of limited importance in this area and ethnicity and clan alliances tend to dominate voter decisions. Even where he has strong candidates, it may not convert into presidential ballots

Offline RV Pundit

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Re: The Mother of All SpreadSheet (MOASS) - 2022 Kenya Election - thread.
« Reply #359 on: June 14, 2022, 08:03:42 PM »
Reading Charles reflection 5yrs ago...he like me got less and less accurate as election went by - this mostly from listening to opinion pollster like Infotrak that churn out crap.

His record is poorer compared to me - I dont think there is an county I got wrong - in terms of who'd win it - just the percentages

https://www.theelephant.info/features/2017/09/07/forms-and-substance-comparing-predictions-and-results-from-kenyas-general-election/
He got closest in my article in June, which predicted a 55-45% victory, In fact, the closer to the election we got and the more information I acquired, the less accurate my predictions were. In fact, I had begun to doubt my own numbers and modified my eve-of-poll prediction from 53-47% (which the spreadsheet suggested) to 52% to 48%. I left however the predicted votes for each candidate the same, and there I was pretty close: the official constituency Form 34Bs show that Kenyatta beat Odinga by 8.2 million to 6.8 million votes, compared to which I had predicted 8 million to 7 million.

Read more at: https://www.theelephant.info/features/2017/09/07/forms-and-substance-comparing-predictions-and-results-from-kenyas-general-election/
The Elephant - Speaking truth to power.