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August 3, 2012

National Poll Shenanigans

Marc Comtois

Take a look at the Real Clear Politics' 2012 Presidential poll averages and you'll see, for the most part, Obama and Romney are within 2-4 pts of each other with Obama leading most of them. Then Pew released a poll showing Obama with a 10 point lead. How'd that happen? Well, several experienced and astute poll watchers noticed the discrepancy between the Democrats and Republicans sampled, which Pew itself laid out:

The current survey finds that 45% of independents back Romney and 43% Obama, which is virtually unchanged from earlier in July. Over the course of the year, independent support has wavered, with neither candidate holding a consistent advantage.

Both candidates have nearly universal backing within their party: Nine-in-ten Democrats support Obama and an identical share of Republicans support Romney. Obama’s overall edge at this point is based on the healthy advantage in overall party identification that Democrats have enjoyed in recent years.

Pew's aggregate shows that they significantly over-sampled Democrats compared to Republicans. That's how, even though 9 in 10 of each party stayed true and Romney has a slight lead over the President with Independents, Obama manages to have a 10 point lead. How can this be a legitimate way to conduct a poll when no one--and I mean no one--really things the Democrats will have a 10 point turnout advantage in November? Hugh Hewitt asked the Quinnipiac pollster--who also tends to over-sample Democrats--the same question.
HH: I want to start with the models, which are creating quite a lot of controversy. In Florida, the model that Quinnipiac used gave Democrats a nine point edge in turnout. In Ohio, the sample had an eight point Democratic advantage. What’s the reasoning behind those models?

PB: Well, what is important to understand is that the way Quinnipiac and most other major polls do their sampling is we do not wait for party ID. We ask voters, or the people we interview, do they consider themselves a Democrat, a Republican, an independent or a member of a minor party. And that’s different than asking them what their party registration is. What you’re comparing it to is party registration. In other words, when someone starts as a voter, they have the opportunity of, in most states, of being a Republican, a Democrat, or a member of a minor party or unaffiliated.

HH: Okay.

PB: So what’s important to understand is what we are doing is we’re asking voters what they consider themselves when we interview them, which was in the last week.

HH: Now what I don’t understand this, so educate me on it, if Democrats only had a three point advantage in Florida in the final turnout measurement in 2008, but in your poll they have a nine point turnout advantage, why is that not a source of skepticism for people?

PB: Well, I mean, clearly there will be some people who are skeptics. This is how we’ve always done our polls. Our record is very good in terms of accuracy. Again, remember, we’re asking people what they consider themselves at the time we call them.

HH: But I don’t know how that goes to the issue, Peter, so help me. I’m not being argumentative, I really want to know. Why would guys run a poll with nine percent more Democrats than Republicans when that percentage advantage, I mean, if you’re trying to tell people how the state is going to go, I don’t think this is particularly helpful, because you’ve oversampled Democrats, right?

PB: But we didn’t set out to oversample Democrats. We did our normal, random digit dial way of calling people. And there were, these are likely voters. They had to pass a screen. Because it’s a presidential year, it’s not a particularly heavy screen.

HH: And so if, in fact, you had gotten a hundred Democrats out of a hundred respondents that answered, would you think that poll was reliable?

PB: Probably not at 100 out of 100.

HH: Okay, so if it was 75 out of 100…

PB: Well, I mean…

For whatever reason, more Democrats seem to be answering the pollsters calls. There could be any number of reasons for this. The obvious error here is believing that people who pick up the phone for pollsters is an accurate reflection of those who will actually vote in November. Even though pollsters seem to know that the model isn't really incorrect, it sure is good for a headline, isn't it?

Comments

"I'm concerned that zealots overreacting to contrived threats of voter fraud by significantly narrowing the voting pool are doing so with brazen disrespect and disregard for our greatest traditions". Former Florida Gov. Charlie Crist

Jim Greer, the former chairman of the Florida GOP, testified that Rick Scott's voter roll purge is an attempt to suppress the black vote. Greer said, "I was upset because the political consultants and staff were talking about voter suppression and keeping blacks from voting".

Making it harder for Americans to vote is as Un-American as it gets. It's also the GOP election strategy for 2012.

Posted by: Sammy in Arizona at August 3, 2012 3:41 PM

I think that for the most part the "likely voter" pollsters are trying to get it right, even if they end up with samples that are not fully reflective of turnout.

For one thing, their critics are measuring these polls by using "registered turnout" numbers; the questions the pollsters are asking is "what do you consider yourself?" That question will not necessarily elicit answers that correspond with the respondents' actual registration.

Take these polls for what they're worth....a little.

Here's my unscientific way of analyzing an incumbent race: What percentage of the voters who voted for the incumbent are likely to stick with the incumbent? What percentage of the voters who opposed the incumbent in the previous race are likely to have been won over to his side?

Given the overwhelming hype that fueled the President's 2008 win, I believe he will suffer a sufficiently substantial slippage (say that four times fast!) that he won't be able to hold serve. And, similarly, how many McCain-Palin voters are likely to switch to the President this year? It's gotta be fewer than 1%.

Note the President's consistently "below 50%" approval rating.

Assuming Romney picks a neutral VP, and no major crisis that causes voters to rally to the President. . . the President will be watching Superbowl XLVII in retirement back home in Chicago.

Posted by: brassband at August 3, 2012 8:32 PM

"Making it harder for Americans to vote is as Un-American as it gets. It's also the GOP election strategy for 2012.'

Spammin Sammy...you mean like the Black Panthers showing up at polling places or Hussein Obama's Justice dept. attempting to nullify military votes?

"On July 17th, the Obama for America Campaign, the Democratic National Committee, and the Ohio Democratic Party filed suit in OH to strike down part of that state’s law governing voting by members of the military. Their suit said that part of the law is ‘arbitrary’ with ‘no discernible rational basis.’"

So Spammin' Sammy stay in the hot Arizona sun, smoke your medical mary-jane and continue to read all Hussein Obama's confidante of Bill Ayres books.

"Ayers participated in the bombings of New York City Police Department headquarters in 1970, the United States Capitol building in 1971, and the Pentagon in 1972, as he noted in his 2001 book, Fugitive Days."

Posted by: ANTHONY at August 4, 2012 4:20 PM

"Ayers participated in the bombings of New York City Police Department headquarters in 1970, the United States Capitol building in 1971, and the Pentagon in 1972, as he noted in his 2001 book, Fugitive Days."

Tsk, Anthony - all of that is Bush's fault ...

Posted by: Monique at August 4, 2012 7:47 PM