Why You Can't Rely on Election Forecasts (nytimes.com) 376
Zeynep Tufekci, writing at The New York Times: There's a strong case for ignoring the predictions. Why do we have models? Why can't we just consider polling averages? Well, presidents are not elected by a national vote total but by the electoral votes of each state, so national polls do not give us the information we need. As two of the last five elections showed -- in 2000 and 2016 -- it's possible to win the popular vote and lose the Electoral College. Models give us a way to process polls of various quality in 50 states to arrive at a forecast. There are two broad ways to model an event: using "fundamentals" -- mechanisms that can affect the event -- and probabilities -- measurements like polls. For elections, fundamentals would be historically informed lessons like, "a better economy favors incumbents." With polls, there is no theory about why they are the way they are. We just use the numbers they produce.
Electoral forecast modelers run simulations of an election based on various inputs -- including state and national polls, polling on issues and information about the economy and the national situation. If they ran, say, 1,000 different simulations with various permutations of those inputs, and if Joe Biden got 270 electoral votes in 800 of them, the forecast would be that Mr. Biden has an 80 percent chance of winning the election. This is where weather and electoral forecasts start to differ. For weather, we have fundamentals -- advanced science on how atmospheric dynamics work -- and years of detailed, day-by-day, even hour-by-hour data from a vast number of observation stations. For elections, we simply do not have anything near that kind of knowledge or data. While we have some theories on what influences voters, we have no fine-grained understanding of why people vote the way they do, and what polling data we have is relatively sparse.
Consequently, most electoral forecasts that are updated daily -- like those from FiveThirtyEight or The Economist -- rely heavily on current polls and those of past elections, but also allow fundamentals to have some influence. Since many models use polls from the beginning of the modern primary era in 1972, there are a mere 12 examples of past presidential elections with dependable polling data. That means there are only 12 chances to test assumptions and outcomes, though it's unclear what in practice that would involve. A thornier problem is that unlike weather events, presidential elections are not genuine "repeat" events. Facebook didn't play a major role in elections until probably 2012. Twitter, without which Mr. Trump thinks he might not have won, wasn't even founded until 2006. How much does an election in 1972, conducted when a few broadcast channels dominated the public sphere, tell us about what might happen in 2020? Interpreting electoral forecasts correctly is yet another challenge. If a candidate wins an election with 53 percent of the vote, that would be a decisive victory. If a probability model gives a candidate a 53 percent chance of winning, that means that if we ran simulations of the election 100 times, that candidate would win 53 times and the opponent 47 times -- almost equal odds.
Electoral forecast modelers run simulations of an election based on various inputs -- including state and national polls, polling on issues and information about the economy and the national situation. If they ran, say, 1,000 different simulations with various permutations of those inputs, and if Joe Biden got 270 electoral votes in 800 of them, the forecast would be that Mr. Biden has an 80 percent chance of winning the election. This is where weather and electoral forecasts start to differ. For weather, we have fundamentals -- advanced science on how atmospheric dynamics work -- and years of detailed, day-by-day, even hour-by-hour data from a vast number of observation stations. For elections, we simply do not have anything near that kind of knowledge or data. While we have some theories on what influences voters, we have no fine-grained understanding of why people vote the way they do, and what polling data we have is relatively sparse.
Consequently, most electoral forecasts that are updated daily -- like those from FiveThirtyEight or The Economist -- rely heavily on current polls and those of past elections, but also allow fundamentals to have some influence. Since many models use polls from the beginning of the modern primary era in 1972, there are a mere 12 examples of past presidential elections with dependable polling data. That means there are only 12 chances to test assumptions and outcomes, though it's unclear what in practice that would involve. A thornier problem is that unlike weather events, presidential elections are not genuine "repeat" events. Facebook didn't play a major role in elections until probably 2012. Twitter, without which Mr. Trump thinks he might not have won, wasn't even founded until 2006. How much does an election in 1972, conducted when a few broadcast channels dominated the public sphere, tell us about what might happen in 2020? Interpreting electoral forecasts correctly is yet another challenge. If a candidate wins an election with 53 percent of the vote, that would be a decisive victory. If a probability model gives a candidate a 53 percent chance of winning, that means that if we ran simulations of the election 100 times, that candidate would win 53 times and the opponent 47 times -- almost equal odds.
There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
Poll numbers are just a distraction and I almost wish for a simpler time when we didn't have this constant bombardment of those numbers.
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
In any case, if you have not done so already go out and VOTE.
This time it matters more than it has for decades. This time you have a real choice, both candidates are NOT the same.
Re: There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Interesting)
Hillary was not the same as Trump... which is why I voted for Trump.
Re: There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Insightful)
At the time people were saying they were the same... Both crooks.
That was the argument, Trump may be corrupt and dishonest but Clinton is just as bad. Well that's come back to bite everyone in the arse now hasn't it?
What will decide this election? (Score:4, Interesting)
How many women tell their husbands "No more sex if Trump wins."
Me? I think news reports on polls should be illegal. It's election tampering.
But I studied the topic many years ago and I only know three things about polls and surveys: (1) It's quite easy to write questions that produce gibberish answers. (2) It's only slightly difficult to produce whatever answers the person paying for the survey wants to see. (3) It's extremely difficult to prepare and administer a survey that gives you any insight into what is really going on.
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A sample size of one person?
There is no general "Trump Bump". Again, look at the effing charts I mentioned.
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Trump, for all his poor communication skills, makes common sense decisions everyone else knows makes sense;
That, unfortunately, is demonstrably false.
As an example, I refer you to the current pandemic situation. A common sense decision would be to listen to medical experts (sure, the lockdowns can be debated, but Trump is even fighting the masks and is generally aiming for "herd immunity").
This is far from the only example, but it is by far the costliest.
That's why trump won, and why he will repeat his victory, despite what the establishment wants you to believe through its information structure.
It's still unclear who will win. But if Trump loses it will be because of the way he handled the pandemic. If he made these common sense decisions you are t
Re: There is nothing wrong with Trump. (Score:4, Insightful)
The scenario requires Hunter Biden to fly 2000 miles away from his home, give his laptop to a blind guy he's never met before, who happens to be a vocal Trump supporter, then not just forget the laptop existed, but abandon it and actively ignore the attempts to reach him, seemingly forgetting that the laptop contains personally incriminating information that he wanted extracted, and he happens to do all this while his father is running for the highest office in the land. Do you really find that plausible? Oh, and also, the laptop contents found its way into the hands of Rudy Guiliani, who was specifically targeted by foreign intelligence agencies according to our own law enforcement experts, and, Rudy also happens to be starring in a Borat movie, where he is show to be extremely gullible and a drunken idiot.
I'm not saying the laptop is for sure fabricted, but when you combine all those facts, with it's totally-by-coincidence late October timeframe, extra scrutiny is warranted.
Re: There is nothing wrong with Trump. (Score:4, Funny)
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There are a lot of questions about the laptop, and many possible explanations.
One possible explanation: He was out of town, and had laptop issues
Second explanation: Someone "acquired" the laptop, and dropped in his name without consent
Third explanation: Someone "built" the laptop with real data (obtained from hacks/leaks), and dropped in his name
Fourth explanation: Someone "built" the laptop with "manufactured" data, and dropped in his name
Fifth explanation: Laptop was never dropped, but it was "built" at t
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The main difference with Hillary and Biden (I voted for trump twice, and previously for Obama) is that it seems to me that Trump was an outsider capable of carrying his own momentum to âoedrain the swampâ.
If he drained the swamp, all he did was replace it with a cesspool. Look at all his appointments (the ones that haven't been revolving doors). Pompeo doesn't care about US foreign policy, he's more interested in running his "Madison Dinners" and prepping for a future presidential run. Barr fawns over Trump so much that he might as well have Trump branded on his forehead in big gold letters like every other Trump property. The BLM director is an industry shill and has already been ruled by a federal judg
Re: There is nothing wrong with Trump. (Score:4, Interesting)
With regard to the alleged Hunter Biden emails...have you read them? Of course not. They have not been released publicly (or even been made available in a meaningful way to reputable media organizations). In comparison, Trump himself has profited directly from his role as president by strongly encouraging (if not requiring) government travelers to stay at his properties. He has also helped his relatives directly profit as well by placing them in well-paid government positions for which they are not qualified.
So, tell me again, why should Trump win? He is all smoke and mirrors and no substance.
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This time you have a real choice, both candidates are NOT the same.
Yeah, right... If we believe the mainstream news (democrat controlled), Trump is a corrupt POS. If we believe Fox News or the New York Post (republican controlled), Biden is a corrupt POS.
We can't win. Either way, a supposed corrupt POS is going to be the next President of the United States.
This is the problem. If the only place you get your news is from the talking heads, you are not getting news, you are getting entertainment. And as with all forms of entertainment, marketing drives the message.
But, in most cases, if you read the article closely, you can sometimes find that they actually do reference sources. Go read those sources. And look to see if they reference other sources. Follow that thread and eventually, you will probably know more about the subject then the talking heads.
If they d
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Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Insightful)
You have a choice between democracy and a banana republic lead by the Man with Great and Unmatched Wisdom and his yes-men.
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:5, Interesting)
Well you can do some independent research to help validate the claims from each side, and see which side is lying and not.
Some important factors.
1. Be aware of the use of Power Words, words that stop you from thinking and you just take it at face value. Riots (All Bad) vs Protests (Can be Good or it can Go Bad) vs Peaceful Protests (All good).
2. Check to see if the media is covering the facts or they are just editorializing things. If they start predicting what will happen from such actions, chances are they are editorializing, vs they are saying what has been done and what had happened.
3. Check Sources, many laws and judgements have publicly available the transcripts of what happened. Check those out if you feel something you have heard seems so outrageous, read the raw material and make your own judgement.
4. How well do they cover both sides? Do they cover the Best of the Best, with some random dude off the street, who they question to show how much the other side is a bunch of Idiots. A Professor in the topic they are covering vs. the word of some lady rushing her kids to school. A Cabinet member vs some College Student who organized a protest.
5. How to they handle Retractions. No Media site is going to get it right all the time, they should have a public forum where they point out their retractions.
6.. a. How to they make their money? This isn't as big of a deal as it often seems. However it will influence how they handle a topic to a degree. If a major company buys ad for your channel, or gives you a lot of money. You will be less likely to bite the hand that feeds you. If you are being paid by a government grant. Those who give you the money vs those who wants to take it away, will also influence your decisions.
6. b. Who is the big boss man. If the owner of the company doesn't like your media, you are probably in trouble too.
7.Are they really a news media site. Or are they an entertainment company who just wants your views. So they make you angry at others and feeling better about yourself. Saying the other guys are lying to you, while we are the only source of truth. That is a sure sign, that they are not interested in the truth, but keeping you on that station.
We can keep on going on, however if you want to use your brain, and go beyond TV news and some big name rags. You may find that you can indeed find what is going on.
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:5, Insightful)
"How well do they cover both sides?"
That's kind of a problem today in that many outlets try to give both "sides" a voice thus giving both sides equal weight. That's seen too much with COVID, Climate Science, and other issues where the vast majority of people in science can demonstrate the facts, irregardless of the crackpot theories on the other side.
Hence we get climate change deniers and people who claim masks don't work.
(To the later I have a request: Should you require surgery in the near future please feel free to tell your doctors and nurses that they can keep their "rights" and that they don't need to wear masks and gloves during the procedure. Actually, hand washing and equipment sterilization shouldn't be bothered with either. After all, if you can't believe the doctors and science on masks, then all of that other science-based stuff is probably just garbage, too. Right?)
Choosing representatives for each side is hard (Score:4, Insightful)
> That's kind of a problem today in that many outlets try to give both "sides" a voice thus giving both sides equal weight.
That's always a problem, in a different way than you seem to be suggesting. You just demonstrated the other problem, in fact.
For example, different people say different things about climate change, there aren't just "two sides":
1) There are a very few people who say human activity has little bearing on global warming.
2) There are those, such as the head of the UN climate change study, who said that San Francisco will be underwater by 2025. And those that said it would be underwater by 2015.
3) There are those who point out that San Francisco in not, in fact, underwater, and doesn't appear to be headed that way in next five years.
4) There are those that say we need to need to reduce CO2 emissions by 25% by 2050.
5) There are those still, after 60 years, fighting against any clean energy other than solar electric, thereby making sure we KEEP burning coal rather than switching to nuclear, which would have entirely prevented this problem if we had done so decades ago.
If you're going to pick two people to represent two sides, whom do you pick? That's hard to get right if you're trying to do a good job. If you're trying to make one "side" look.like.loonies it's easy to do. On the other hand, you can set up a debate between the folks who think Armageddon is coming in 2030 vs those who think it'll be 2060. You can present those as the "two sides".
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If we believe the mainstream news (democrat controlled)
If you believe mainstream news is democrat controlled then you have a bigger problem than simply being unable to understand which news stories are flat out lying and which aren't.
You may not be able to win. A lot of other people very much can.
I feel like for you I specifically need to say this: Please don't burn down any 5G towers regardless of what some post tells you about them causing corona virus.
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eah, right... If we believe the mainstream news (democrat controlled), Trump is a corrupt POS. If we believe Fox News or the New York Post (republican controlled), Biden is a corrupt POS.
Convincing people that the above statement is accurate is one of the early goals of fascism, and the fact so many people believe this is the cornerstone of many problems in the US today. Once you convince people an entire profession whose sole purpose is to educate the population is significantly biased, propaganda can spread unchallenged over most of the populace.
Going after MSNBC as being just as biased as Fox News does has some validity, but claiming all of mainstream media is biased is a good indication
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And yet Biden is the one bragging that they have built "the largest voter fraud organization in history". His words. Not mine.
Re: There is nothing wrong with forecasts. (Score:3)
After all, why would we believe Trump himself when he says to wait until just after the election for him to be fired?
https://youtu.be/sECFxmDJ6aE [youtu.be]
Badmouth and threaten to fire your foremost disease specialist during the pandemic while making up stuff about him to make yourself look good.
Very presidential.
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That's not the whole answer though, otherwise no forecast, however lousy, could ever be said to be 'wrong,' so long as it gave a nonzero probability to every outcome.
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Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:5, Informative)
> three in ten chance of winning STILL means someone can win.
Absolutely. As I recall, in 2016 538 said Trump had about 36% or 38% chance of winning. We means he could certainly win. Currently, Trump's chances stand at about 10%. Possible, but Biden is in a significantly better position than Clinton was.
In 2016, the polls were off by 2%-3%. This year, if we assume pollsters haven't learned anything and they are off by 3% AGAIN, Biden still wins.
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I'll point out that the polls measured public opinion at the time that they were taken, and that public opinion shifted in 2016 right before the election due to Comey's violating department policy and publicly announcing re-opening an investigation into Clinton.
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I'll point out that the polls measured public opinion at the time that they were taken, and that public opinion shifted in 2016 right before the election due to Comey's violating department policy and publicly announcing re-opening an investigation into Clinton.
That's very true, Nate Silver has an article concluding that while there were many other factors, that could have been enough to move the swing states.
Also, the polls did not include the undecided voters (which was about 14%). The polls would remain accurate if the undecided voters broke evenly to Trump vs Clinton, but they did not.
Re: There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:3)
The polls also failed to take into account education level, which we now know was a strong predictor of who was going to vote for Trump and who was going to vote for Clinton.
This year, support for Biden appears to cross that educational divide for the most part, while support for Trump has largely remained confined to those without degrees.
Actually, his base hasn't really expanded at all in 4 years. The percentage of those who approve of him is about the same as the percentage who will vote for him (via nat
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It's interesting that this time around Russia has not made a big intervention like they did with those emails in 2016.
Oh sure we had the Hunter Biden laptop bullshit but that seems to have had very little impact. Maybe they didn't have anything better or maybe the IRA got coronavirus. Hey, something good might have come of it!
You do know that the "Russian" thing with the E-mail's didn't happen right? That what Trump said during the debates was him being sarcastic to Hillary about the Email issue and what happened to the DNC servers was only rumored to be Russian, never proven. In fact, it was obviously an inside job and the receiver (and publisher) of the E-mails says it didn't involve the Russians.
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This is funny. How many different committee's need to say that Russians were involved in the election before you drop this line of nonsense? Both the House and Senate committee's reported this. If you're going to troll you need to do better. Update your talking points from 2016 to something current at least.
I didn't say the Russians didn't meddle in the election, I only said nobody has proof that they had anything to do with the DNC Email hack and the statement of Trump during the debate was really him giving Hillary a slap about her "lost" 30,000 Emails (which is ANOTHER issue entirely). I'll further state that neither of these events where related.
So your reading comprehension must be lacking..
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Insightful)
They aren't making that mistake a second time.
So what mistake are they making this time, since clearly the polls are wrong about Biden being so far ahead when in reality he is clearly impossibly far behind....
I say this as someone who lives in one of the bluest States in the Union, who has watched a "journalist" doing interviews on the street until they finally... after HOURS... finally got their several Biden supporters, at which point they wrapped it up, AND ONLY AIRED THE BIDEN SUPPORTERS. The numbers were easily a 20:1 ratio, but thats not the narrative they aired.
What people dont seem to understand is that the professional pollsters arent trying to predict the outcome, they are trying to influence it.
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Interesting)
I guess Biden supporters don't spend as much time out on the streets. But your anecdotal experience clearly is better than all the polling
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They aren't making that mistake a second time.
So what mistake are they making this time, since clearly the polls are wrong about Biden being so far ahead when in reality he is clearly impossibly far behind....
-snip-
What people dont seem to understand is that the professional pollsters arent trying to predict the outcome, they are trying to influence it.
I hear that narrative quite a bit - that the polls are intentionally wrong, that they are trying to shape the race, not measure it. If that is the case, then why is that:
1. The swing states seem universally agreed on - Biden and Trump are campaigning in the same few states, and all the ones that the polls identify as the closest. Do the polling firms have a secret lair somewhere where they all agree on how they will lie to the world? And if they are lying, why are the candidates behaving as if the polls
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> three in ten chance of winning STILL means someone can win.
Absolutely. As I recall, in 2016 538 said Trump had about 36% or 38% chance of winning. We means he could certainly win. Currently, Trump's chances stand at about 10%. Possible, but Biden is in a significantly better position than Clinton was.
In 2016, the polls were off by 2%-3%. This year, if we assume pollsters haven't learned anything and they are off by 3% AGAIN, Biden still wins.
Think of it this way: if there was an activity that had a 30% chance of killing you, would you do it? How about a 10% chance? (consider that skydiving, an activity that many people consider dangerous and possibly lethal, has a .0006% chance of killing you).
But yes, if we take the results of 2016-both the projections and the final results- and compare them with the current numbers to account for both the normal margin of error and the actual 2016 margin of error, Biden should still have enough to win. But
Re:There is nothing wrong with forcasts. (Score:4, Insightful)
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Poll numbres are meaningless (Score:3)
Actual votes are what counts. I lie to any pollster that bugs me for info. I tell them someone other than who I actually voted for....it's none of their business.
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Also a government, who actually cares about its population would also use national polls to get an inkling on what is going on.
Lets say (You can if you feel like swap the parties around too) you live in a solid Red District or State. However the polling sees that from 2016 - 2020 you see a 10% increase in interest in electing a democrat. Sure that area will still go Republican, however if you are smart you will see that the Demographics in that area are changing, or something is going on that people don
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The Republicans govern by a poll.
Every day they poll one person and change their policies to match his thinking of the day.
Unfortunately, it is the same person every day.
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Governments already do this. It's known as poll driven politics [irpp.org] and it is often criticized because, from one perspective, it means pandering to the masses when they are wrong, rather than doing what's logical and right. Politicians may seem ideological, but that's usually because polls tell them that their voters are ideological.
Too much assuming (Score:5, Insightful)
They assume that only 4% of people are dicks and giving the wrong answers on purpose.
According to my environment, the number should be more like 40%.
Re:Too much assuming (Score:4, Interesting)
It's not just that. People self-select into polls. Nobody is forced to talk to a pollster. I have a hard time believing that the people who pick up the phone and talk to a stranger about politics are really representative of broader society.
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It's not just that. People self-select into polls. Nobody is forced to talk to a pollster. I have a hard time believing that the people who pick up the phone and talk to a stranger about politics are really representative of broader society.
That's the one thing that makes the "shy/silent Trump voter" argument seem a little shaky. Why would you talk to a pollster in the first place if you were afraid to tell them who you really supported? I would think you would be more likely to simply hang up, especially since people are desensitized to hanging up on people with all the spam calls you get nowadays.
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They weight by age, income and education and other factors to try to adjust for that.
One of the mistakes of 2016 was not weighting by education which has become an important predictor of voting intention, but most pollsters have fixed that problem.
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Generally between 5 and 25% on anonymous polling of other subjects.
Poll Response (Score:5, Interesting)
A major factor is phone poll response rate. According to Pew, it's decreased from ~30% in 2000 to ~6% in 2018. Overall it's probably much less than that.
Now that phone numbers are, basically, ephemeral, having no concrete tie to any specific person or place, it's *really* hard getting accurate location-tied information. I have three phone numbers on various devices that put me in three different counties. My wife's work-issued cell phone number places her on the other side of the state. People send in mailed polls at an even lower rate than phone polls. I've seen surveys that come with cash in the mail asking us to fill it in, promising a gift card if we do.
As for on-line polls, there is essentially no verification of address unless you are buying something, so unless the poll is coming from an on-line store, it's also basically worthless.
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Do you not have exit polls in the US? In the UK they ask people leaving the polling station which way they voted.
It's imperfect because of course some decline to say and some lie, but it tends to produce fairly accurate predictions.
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We have exit polls, but they're not going to help as much in this election because of all the mail-in voting. They also don't help with predictions ahead of time.
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Ah that's true. There isn't much that can be done for mail in votes.
Good that so many people have already voted though.
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We've just been discussing why phone polling is decreasingly valuable, mostly because of land line abandonment and also increased volume of spam calls leading people to not answer phone calls unless they recognize the caller.
In fact, phone polling does NOT "work" any longer.
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Do you not have exit polls in the US?
You do know what "forecast" means, right? :)
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Any unsolicited call to my phone gets you nothing but a "Go fuck yourself, never call me again" anyway, and I'm not the only person who will rightfully bite the head off someone who bothers me with such archaic bullshit technology.
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A major factor is phone poll response rate.
From what I understand the polls were skewed by the undecided voters (about 14% in 2016). If the undecided voters broke evenly to Trump vs Clinton the results would be far closer to accurate.
A pollster cannot be expected to predict votes of the undecideds in their estimates.
Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:4, Insightful)
GIGO (garbage in, garbage out) is substantial issue with collecting data in 2020. There are many problems of various severity - from people not answering the phones due to spam to people just not willing to admit voting for Trump. When was the last time you answered your phone from unknown number? Me too, just too many calls from "Microsoft Technical Support". Consensus is that Trump voters are under counted, the only question is by how much. Even if (that is a big IF) you have an accurate model, feeding it flawed data will result in flawed results.
The second issue are inaccurate models used to predict the outcome in 2020. A lot of modeling is heavily based on socioeconomic and demographic data (e.g. income, race, age, location). Basically, "past performance" is bulk of modeling using by polls. 2020 is unique for many reasons, as such models based on past are a lot less accurate.
Existing polling severely underestimates uncertainty of the results and should not be take at face value. We won't know the results until the votes are counted. Everything else is reading the tea leaves at this point.
Re:Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:5, Informative)
Existing polling severely underestimates uncertainty of the results and should not be take at face value. We won't know the results until the votes are counted. Everything else is reading the tea leaves at this point.
Which is why a potential gameplan for one side is to, if they appear ahead at specific points in specific states, declare victory and try to stop (or at least discredit) further vote counting.
https://www.axios.com/trump-cl... [axios.com]
And remember: due to state law it is physically impossible to know on election night the correct vote totals for specific states, including battleground states like Pennsylvania. All indicators are that Democrats are leading in early/mail-in voting, while Trump will lead in votes cast day of. In Pennsylvania state law says that mail-in ballots cannot be processed and counted until 7am on election day (7 counties have said they won't even start counting them until the following day). Over 2.4 million mail-in ballots have been returned, which is more than 1/3 the total number of voters for the 2016 election.
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Estimates I read somewhere is that approximately 2% of mail in votes expected to be lost in the mail. As Democrat voters are a lot more concerned with preven
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"All indications"?
In Wisconsin, considered to be a battleground state by at least the Republicans, early voting has been heaviest in areas dominated by Republicans. That's still not "votes counted", because legally that doesn't start until November 3rd.
Lots of people are doing comparisons of which polls got the most accurate results in 2016, and how they compare in 2020. One "mostly accurate" poll doesn't ask people who they're planning to vote for, because many lie; They ask, "How do you think your neighbo
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Heck, I'm getting calls and texts to vote Democratic in Texas, and I've never lived there. I can understand that sort of thing in Chicago, but Texas? Maybe I'm participating in polls down there that I don't know about...
I've been getting flooded with election texts from both sides, especially Republican, is my southeastern state (ironically none addressed to me, but to my father and sister-we all are on the same mobile account and number is the primary). And the airwaves are completely saturated with ads as well. I would assume someone gave your phone number out as theirs somewhere (or just miswrote/mistyped) and it's bad data, but the fact is that these traditionally red southern states are coming more and more into pla
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You're just making up numbers while wishful thinking.
https://electproject.github.io... [github.io] has the actual released mail ballot returns, and you can see that urban counties are returning at about the same rate as rural counties, even though processing is slower in larger counties.
You also seem a little confused about people's ability to aggregate polls; if you thought the substantive comments were cherry picking one poll, you're an idiot you can't read.
Did you know that the "over-sample" has already been correct
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people just not willing to admit voting for Trump
If you're voting for someone so heinous you're not willing to admit voting for them, you've got a bigger problem than the polls.
Re:Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:5, Insightful)
people just not willing to admit voting for Trump
If you're voting for someone so heinous you're not willing to admit voting for them, you've got a bigger problem than the polls.
Views like this, cancel culture and social media dragging is exactly why people are not willing to admit voting for Trump. People like you created this problem.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
If you're voting for someone so heinous you're not willing to admit voting for them, you've got a bigger problem than the polls.
Views like this, cancel culture and social media dragging is exactly why people are not willing to admit voting for Trump.
Views like yours are why we're calling Trump voters snowflakes these days, when they were the ones who popularized the term. For the most part, they're white and fragile. The idea that you should own your decisions being too scary for Trump supporters only proves the point. They're cowards who lack the courage of their convictions, except when they get in large enough groups to harass a campaign bus.
Re: (Score:3)
Not wanting to put up with shitheads like yourself doesn't make one a snowflake. Not wanting to had your house tagged or your car keyed, or your business burned to the ground in the middle of the night doesn't make you a snowflake.
Re:Lies, damn lies and statistics (Score:5, Funny)
From TFA:
from the beginning of the modern primary era in 1972, there are a mere 12 examples of past presidential elections with dependable polling data. That means there are only 12 chances to test assumptions and outcomes
Obviously we need to have an annual presidential election to increase our data resolution. /me exits the building fleeing a hail of rotten vegetables.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
No one in the right mind is going to admit to voting for Trump these days except among friends who are inclined to do the same.
So you agree then that all of those people driving around in pickups flying Trump flags are out of their mind.
Re: (Score:3)
Those driving around trying to push campaign buses off of the road are likely out of their minds to be sure. The others going on the "drive around in trucks and SUVs with your banners waving" road rallies may or may not be. Though you'd have to be out of your mind to show up to one of those road rallies with a Prius, they'd assume you were a Democrat plant if you did that!
I don't see the point of such road rallies myself. I don't see the point of going to a presidential rally either. I also don't see th
Re:Simple: there's an incentive to not talk about (Score:5, Informative)
No one in the right mind is going to admit to voting for Trump these days except among friends who are inclined to do the same.
Have you seen the videos of Trump supporter interviews? Granted, that's not all Trump supporters, but many are very vocal. I mean, his supporters would confront/derail Biden cars on the road [texastribune.org], so I don't think they would hesitate to admit voting for Trump.
Also, if there are so many shy Trump voters, he should be able to win the popular vote too. (Yes, I realize it doesn't matter for the election purposes, but it would confirm this theory).
This one is easy (Score:2)
Forecast enough and the forecast will be wrong. People look at them and then do not bother to vote. That gave the UK the Brexit, that gave the US Trump and other catastrophes are on record too.
So... the NYT is basically saying... (Score:2)
Ignore 99% of what we have been selling you for the past 4 years...
You can rely on the polls... (Score:2)
... to be biassed in favor of the Democrats by 6-8%
You can't trust the leftists, but you can trust them to behave like leftists. The people with university degrees in Sociology and such, who manage the pollsters, design the polls, and interpret the raw data, are overwhelmingly left leaning.
The scenario of 2016 happens again in 2020, and will happen in 2024. At the last moment, the margin between the candidates will disappear or even reverse, "explained" by some late event that in reality did not change
Re: (Score:2)
... to be biassed in favor of the Democrats by 6-8%
You can't trust the leftists, but you can trust them to behave like leftists. The people with university degrees in Sociology and such, who manage the pollsters, design the polls, and interpret the raw data, are overwhelmingly left leaning.
The scenario of 2016 happens again in 2020, and will happen in 2024. At the last moment, the margin between the candidates will disappear or even reverse, "explained" by some late event that in reality did not change votes. The pollsters will cover their asses and play the same trick next time.
Yeah, damn all those radical leftists in the Republican party and at Fox News for putting out all those polls showing Biden in the lead! "Wait, what?" you ask? Yes, even Fox News has published polls showing Biden leading and as for the Republican party, well, both parties do internal polling all the time, especially in major elections such as this, to gauge how they are doing in the down ballot races (state level elections, House/Senate, etc). During a presidential election year these down ballot races te
Re:You can rely on the polls... (Score:4, Insightful)
Showing Biden in the lead but within a margin of uncertainty seems like a good way to get Trump supporters to come out and vote? It's not a hopeless cause, but needs all the support needed to make it happen.
I don't see how 'leftists' would want to present poll data that undermines them and causes them to say every 5 seconds 'don't rely upon the polls, Biden can easily still lose'.
I will say that 2016 to some extent had some novel facets that couldn't be easily predicted, and especially 2020 has a lot of wildcards in the mix so who knows how badly mismatched polls will be from reality.
Polling in Cancel Culture. (Score:2)
I use the Weather Forecast too (Score:3)
Well, not to mention... (Score:2)
We have secret ballot, so people may deviate from what they claim they will/would vote.
You also have a guess as to whether poll participants can and will actually vote. Particularly this year this is a wildly unknown territory given the pandemic situation, both people abstaining from voting out of fear on the one hand, on the other hand aggressive enablement of absentee ballots may make people vote who didn't bother before actually vote.
Also have to guess about the people who decline to participate in polli
You can't rely on election forcasts (Score:5, Insightful)
There's been multiple cases [fark.com] of voter intimidation [reddit.com], an attempt to throw out 100k ballots [twitter.com] that's on it's way to a (packed) federal court and the President has said he will declare victory before the votes are counted [axios.com]
And don't get me started on the rampant voter suppression. I'm sure it's just a coincidence that the company in charge of ballots in swing state Georgia is run by the opposition party [foxnews.com] and didn't deliver 100k+ ballots in districts that lean heavily against his party. Or that voter roll purgers disproportionately target minority and youth voters. Or that the average wait time to vote is 10 times higher if you're black [ajc.com]
At a certain point it's time to call a spade a spade. The GOP can no longer win on the strength of their ideas (if they ever could) and are outright cheating to win. The only question is, are we as a nation OK with that.
We'll know in about 3-5 days.
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Trump supporters lie. (Score:4, Informative)
You got your facts wrong. Stop using facebook as your news source.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Trump supporters lie. (Score:-1) by Anonymous Coward
[...]
I can trust my own eyes. I can't trust the democrat controlled "Main Stream Media" (MSM). Nor do I trust you.
What a coincidence. We don't trust ACs, since AC posting is primarily used for trolling and misinformation. People whose opinions are worth something tend to associate them with an identity.
Re: (Score:2)
You don't like AC postings because using your mod points against an AC is pretty much throwing away your mod points.
Wrong again. I don't like AC postings because I don't know what kind of nutter left them, as there's no posting history associated. I don't moderate.
Re: (Score:2)
Well certainly anecdata holds more weight than widely gathered information.
Re: (Score:3)
Well, to counter your anecdote, here is my anecdote. I live it a city that votes roughly 60% democrat. You can tell who the biggest Trump supporters are around here, because they've had their Trump lawn signs up for OVER FOUR FUCKING YEARS. Thats right, it's been a non-stop 4+ years of political advertisement from them. And not ONCE did I ever see any of their signs disappear in those 4 years.
On the other hand, the first person I saw to put up a Biden sign this summer was quite notable. I saw the sign and t
Re: (Score:2)
Well, to counter your anecdote, here is my anecdote. I live it a city that votes roughly 60% democrat. You can tell who the biggest Trump supporters are around here, because they've had their Trump lawn signs up for OVER FOUR FUCKING YEARS. Thats right, it's been a non-stop 4+ years of political advertisement from them. And not ONCE did I ever see any of their signs disappear in those 4 years.
On the other hand, the first person I saw to put up a Biden sign this summer was quite notable. I saw the sign and thought "oh, the first one". Then a few days later I noticed no sign anymore. Then a week later I noticed he had a sign inside his front window. I saw him outside and stopped to chat with him. His first sign was stolen.
Don't forget those Biden supporters in the Midwest who used hay bales to make a giant Biden/Harris sign, only to have a neighbor burn it down within 24 hours.
Violent leftists... (Score:3, Informative)
Ah yes those violent leftists https://www.cbsnews.com/news/f... [cbsnews.com]
Oh wait it was Trump supporters in pickup trucks with the support of local police who tried to run a tour bus off the road. Trump is even defending his supporters in blocking traffic. https://www.nytimes.com/2020/1... [nytimes.com]
I keep hearing how conservatives would love to run over leftists who block the road. Does this mean liberals are allowed to run down Trump supporters who block traffic? https://www.usatoday.com/story... [usatoday.com]
Media bubbles (Score:5, Insightful)
If you think that all the violent assholes are on one side, you're in a media bubble, no matter which side you're on. For better or worse, no group has managed to keep all the violent assholes for itself.
I have my opinions about which violent assholes are more dangerous to democracy, and you probably do, too, and we could argue about that, but "our side is free of violence and their side is full of it" is factually wrong.
Re: (Score:2, Interesting)
When someone calls you up out of the blue, you don't know who they are or how much they already know about you. The caller could be a legit pollster, or they could be a car full of lunatic lefties in a van parked down the street, with guns of their own...
There is no real benefit to me to tell supposed pollsters who I'm voting for, that's all I'm sayin'.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: Trump supporters lie. (Score:2)
Pollsters refer to these kinds of people as "shy". Not inflammatory descriptions like "liars" or questionable descriptions like "too smart". Just a bit shy on the phone.
Re: (Score:2)
I used to consider Americans of at least average honesty. Not anymore. The polls don't work because Trump followers don't think twice about lying.
Trump supporters are less than half of the [voting] population, we know that from the last election. If you assume that only the Trump voters are spectacularly dishonest, then that suggests that the average American is of average honesty. You could counter with the idea that there are plenty of dishonest anti-Trumpers, but then one could counter with the idea that at least some Trump voters are honest.
I don't think Americans are notably more or less honest than anyone else. I think that we're notably more p
Re: (Score:2)
I don't think lying to pollsters is a particularly partisan issue...
To the extent that I think the 2016 results disagreed with polling was due to a combination of:
-Some centrist people afraid to admit they were willing to give Trump a go (the court of popular opinion made it a ludicrous choice to admit to in a non-secret context)
-Historical assumptions about voter participation being wrong (Trump motivated some people to get out and vote that may have been assumed to not participate).
-The poll results thems
Re:3 reasons (Score:5, Informative)
Then you throw in voter fraud, how much do you pad your numbers for voter fraud? We've already seen a lot of voter fraud this election
[citation needed]
We've seen a lot of voter disqualification fraud, and a lot of vote manipulation fraud on Trump's part what with the reduced ballot box locations, removal of post office boxes and other tampering with the postal system, and so on... so we've seen vote fraud, but not voter fraud. The two things are massively different.
Re: (Score:2)
We've already seen a lot of voter fraud this election
No, we haven't.
Re: (Score:3)
There's ignorant, misinformed and there's willfully ignorant.
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/new... [nbcnewyork.com]
That's from May. Local elections or primaries. Hundreds of ballots.
https://www.shorenewsnetwork.c... [shorenewsnetwork.com]
Also from May. Local elections. Involved candidates delivering ballots for voters which is illegal under state law (both that candidates cannot act as bearers and one can only be a bearer for no more than 3 people)
https://www.nationalreview.com... [nationalreview.com]
Project Veritas. "Nuff said. They have no credibility and have been caught numerous times manufacturing evidence.
https://justthenews.com/politi... [justthenews.com]
All small instances, with anyhting from a handfull to dozens of votes in local elections.
https://www.sun-sentinel.com/n... [sun-sentinel.com]
That one was so blantant
Re: (Score:3)
You need people who are likely to vote, including illegal immigrants (whether or not they are supposed to vote is moot to the point that they are voting).
You don't have to be okay with illegal immigration to acknowledge that most are trying to fly under the radar as much as possible, and are highly unlikely to stick their neck out and commit election fraud.
Yeah, nothing says "look at me!" more than committing a felony.