Race to the WH

Last updated
Race to the WH
Available inEnglish
FoundedJune 2020
Country of originUnited States
Created byLogan Phillips
URL racetothewh.com

Race to the WH is an American political forecasting website that was founded in 2020 by Logan Phillips. The website predicts presidential, senate, house, and governor races.

Contents

History

Race to the WH was founded in 2020 by Logan Phillips. Phillips started the program when he was getting his graduate degree at Columbia University. He studied under Presidential Campaign management under Karine Jean Pierre, the former Biden Press secretary. Phillips worked on Hillary Clinton's 2016 presidential election and Dan Malloy's re-election campaign for governor of Connecticut in 2014. [1]

Race to the WH uses a political model with quantitative data to forecast their election, instead of using qualitative data. [2] forecast in which they simulate the national popular vote, factor it onto the current partisan lean of a state, comparing it to results from the last 50 years of elections in that state, and then running it through the a simulator. They then run their model over 50,000 times and then average it to find the most common results, accounting for factors of over performance with a demographic or region. Lastly, they then run their models filtering conditions to match previous elections to test the accuracy of the model. [3]

In the 2024 cycle, Race to the WH provided polling averages to Split Ticket for their House of Representatives predictions. [4] Logan Phillips also did a joint interview with Lakshya Jain of Split Ticket on Politico about the 2024 Presidential election. [5]

Predictions

During the 2022 election cycle, Race to the WH called 96.5% of the races correctly, only getting one senate race wrong, two gubernatorial races wrong, and got 419/435 of the house races correct, making them one of the "most accurate forecasters of 2022". [6] [7]

During the 2024 election cycle, Race to the WH incorrectly predicted Kamala Harris would win the presidency, due to strong showings in the Blue Wall. [8] However, the group did correctly predict all but two of the senate races, incorrectly forecasting Bob Casey's and Sherrod Brown's win in Pennsylvania and Ohio respectively. [9]

Regardless of their inaccurate predictions in the 2024 cycle, Race to the WH has received attention during the 2026 cycle, with their predictions being featured on the well-known 270towin website and the website being praised on Nate Silver's website. [10] [2] Race to the WH and Logan Phillips believe that Democrats could have a natural advantage this cycle due to these midterms being under a Republican president, and the fact that midterms always affect incumbent party. [11]

References

  1. "RacetotheWH - Our Mission and Track Record". Race to the WH. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  2. 1 2 McKown-Dawson, Eli. "Georgia has gone from a luxury to a necessity for Democrats". www.natesilver.net. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  3. "How the 2024 Presidential Forecast Works (Methodology)". Race to the WH. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  4. Payne, Russell (2025-08-05). "Are Democrats blowing it? A "blue wave" is no sure thing". Salon.com. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  5. "'Higher Odds for an Upset': Election Forecasters Break Down the 2024 Race". POLITICO. 2024-11-02. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  6. "RacetotheWH - Record of Calling Elections - 2022". Race to the WH. 2023-03-30. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  7. Payne, Russell (2024-10-05). ""She has an easier path to 270": Experts disagree on who has the "advantage" 30 days before election". Salon.com. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  8. Payne, Russell (2024-10-05). ""She has an easier path to 270": Experts disagree on who has the "advantage" 30 days before election". Salon.com. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  9. "Republicans' chances of flipping key Senate seats with 3 weeks to election". Newsweek. 2024-10-13. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  10. "RacetotheWH 2026 Senate Forecast - 270toWin". 270toWin.com. Retrieved 2025-08-23.
  11. Payne, Russell (2025-08-05). "Are Democrats blowing it? A "blue wave" is no sure thing". Salon.com. Retrieved 2025-08-23.