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What do you get when you combine a passion for data and Microsoft Power BI with an interest in U.S. politics, social economic and cultural trends? You receive compelling reports covering election data, obesity and drug overdose rates, along with income per capita levels within the United States over the past 10+ years.
My name is Jeff Lumpkin and I’m a Program Manager with Power BI. I’m also an avid follower of political elections, economic trends, societal developments, etc. Driven by this interest, I have collected over 100 columns of data about the U.S., going down to the county level. This data comes from a wide variety of public sources, such as the U.S. Census, Center for Disease Control and the Bureau of Labor Statistics. As I built out the dataset, I began to collect political data as well, and now have data from the past 3 presidential elections: 2008, 2012 and 2016. Currently, I have a table with over 100 columns of data for each of the 3,100+ counties across the country.
Taken in aggregate, this data has allowed for some very interesting analyses, which includes obesity rates across time, deaths from drug overdoses from 1999 to 2014, the relationship between education and per capita income/poverty rate, as well as some very interesting observations about the 2016 presidential election.
Using Microsoft SandDance, a Power BI custom visual that offers rich modeling, interactivity, and animated transitions, I created visualizations and trend analysis across the U.S. counties. I chose SandDance as I felt it was the best medium to spin through large amounts of data very rapidly. I’ve found SandDance to be particularly useful when there are many different entities (counties) and many different metrics (columns). One of the most interesting explorations was to compare election results across U.S. counties for the past 3 elections.
Enclosed below are the data sets I used to create this analysis, as well as my report. I encourage you to explore the data with SandDance and Power BI to make your own discoveries. If you haven’t already done so, download SandDance, followed by the Excel and PBIX files. Once you’ve had a chance to play with the data, please comment below with your own insights! I’m going to continue adding new columns to this data set to make it even richer. If you have data you’d like to contribute, that would be very welcome.
For more information and to obtain the data see additional resources below:
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