This school has accurately predicted the next US president for more ...

3 hours ago

Since 1972, students at a school in the north-east US have done the research on candidates and issues, going through the process to cast their ballots. While it technically doesn't count, how they vote is worth paying attention to.

US election - Figure 1
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For more than 50 years, Seaholm High School in Birmingham, in Michigan state, has accurately predicted the next US president.

"Today we're running our mock election which we love for every single presidential election we have," said government and economics teacher Kellie Howe on Monday.

For more than 50 years, Seaholm High School in Birmingham, in Michigan state, has accurately predicted the next US president. (Photo Ernest W Seaholm High School) (Supplied)

It's their 13th mock presidential election.

"We have our students checking in and they are required to show photo ID," Howe said.

It's a process meant to not only look and feel like the real thing.

"We need to get our voices out there. We are just as important in this country as like somebody who is 65," said Sophie Gable.

Gable and Spencer Werner are both seniors in the government class who always make sure the school's precinct is voter-ready.

US election - Figure 2
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Students at the school say their mock election helps them understand the importance of US democracy. (Steve Marcus/Las Vegas Sun via AP) (AP)

"Our teacher helped us to understand how important it is to understand who you're voting for and what the person you're going for is gonna do for this country," Werner said.

"It's just really good practice," Gable said.

"It makes me feel like I know what I'm doing that like when I'm actually gonna get up there and vote that I'm not gonna be completely lost."

All students and staff can cast a ballot for president, senator and one key local issue on the real ballot if they choose.

"We talk about it in social studies all the time, we have all these election ads we're seeing," Howe said.

"We've seen all of the signs as we drive to school, but they don't feel involved unless they can physically vote."

So what factors have driven the school's remarkable accuracy in predicting the holder of the White House?

US election - Figure 3
Photo 9News

"I think it has to do with the demographic of our community," Howe said.

"We pull from Birmingham, Bloomfield, a little bit into Southfield, Troy, so we have a very big range that comes to this school."'

Principal Michael Wicker cast his own mock ballot as a student here during the US presidential election narrowly won by George Bush in 2000.

"I think this election cycle has a lot more mainstream media attention," Wicker said.

​"You think they'll get it right this year?" I asked him.

"I know they will. We're not going to break the streak, not in my first year as principal," Wicker said.

"Personally I am wondering because this is such a contentious election if that is going to lay a factor into this," Howe said. "Will we be right, will we be wrong?"

Harris deploys celebrities across battleground states in final hours

The results of their mock election were released on Monday. Here's the breakdown:

President & Vice President

Kamala Harris and Tim Walz (Democrat) 390 | 56.6 per cent

Donald Trump and JD Vance (Republican) 296 | 46.1 per cent

Elissa Slotkin (Democrat) 365 | 52.9 per cent

Mike Rogers (Republican) 318 | 46.1 per cent

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