Ozean Media has officially launched Political Signals, a real-time forecasting dashboard providing a definitive “Signal Consensus” for

the 2026 midterm election cycle. Built to operationalize established political forecasting frameworks for the modern era, Version 1.0 is now live at
signals.ozeanmedia.com.
The “Signal Consensus” Methodology
The dashboard is built on the fundamental premise that 10 critical data signals dictate the political environment. These metrics are rooted in decades of political science and electoral history. When 5 or more of these signals enter an “Alarm State,” the environment is historically proven to shift aggressively against the incumbent party.
Current Intelligence (March 12, 2026):
- Global Status: 5 ALARMS ACTIVE.
- Verdict: Environment shifting against incumbent.
Real-Time Data Integration
“Political Signals” is not a static poll aggregator. It is a comprehensive intelligence feed drawing from authoritative, non-partisan sources:
- Voter Sentiment: Real-time DDHQ polling for independent-voter approval and “Right/Wrong Track” direction.
- Economic Fundamentals: Live tracking of Real Disposable Income (FRED), the PCE vs. Wage Spread, and Atlanta Fed GDPNow estimates.
- Structural Mechanics: Congressional seat exposure data from the House Clerk and toss-up ratings from Cook Political Report.
- Market Probabilities: House-control forecasts via Kalshi and Polymarket prediction markets.
Why the 2026 Midterms Require This Tool
With early primary results showing incumbents on shaky ground and a volatile global backdrop, the 2026 midterms are shaping up to be a historic cycle. This dashboard replaces guesswork with high-velocity data, providing a tool for those who need to see the “signal” before it hits the mainstream.
Meet the Architect: Alex Patton
The Political Signals dashboard was developed by Alex Patton, one of Florida’s most sought-after political strategists and public affairs consultants.
As the founder of Ozean Media and Meer Research, Patton specializes in fusing opinion research with political media to move the audiences that matter. His work is defined by the practical application of data to complex political landscapes. When he is not guiding elected officials, trade associations, or private sector clients, he teaches the craft as an adjunct professor in the University of Florida’s (UF) Graduate Political Campaigning Program and at Santa Fe College.
Patton is known for a “data-first, truth-always” approach. He ensures clients see the reality of the numbers, even if it hurts.