Posted on 10/19/2006 7:36:45 AM PDT by Ravi
Republicans edged ahead in one tightly contested senate race but while the latest Battleground States Poll puts the party on track to retain control of the chamber, several tight races leave the Election night outcome uncertain.
(Excerpt) Read more at online.wsj.com ...
An honest pole.
;*) I concur
I am to the point that if we can at least get the Senate, I will be at least okay wtih the election.
Why? Perhaps if we are the opposition party in the House, it will fire us up to actually DO something in Congress.
But, the Senate is vital...we need it in case of a SCOTUS retirement or Dem actions in the House to try to investigate people.
The minority doesn't ever "DO" anything other than obstruct things from getting done.
Only when it's good news to us. Then he's a genious, has a strong verifiable and repeatable polling technique and worthy of our respect. Otherwise, when his numbers go against us, he's MSM scum.
It's the conservative world view.
For two straight weeks, I want to see Zog, Rass, and Battleground on the same page. If the Pubs are up in the Senate races and will hold the Senate by , say Nov. 1, I will believe these polls. As for the House, it is now up to 27 seats supposedly the Pubs will lose. I want to see those races all polled by the 3 pollsters above and by Nov. 1 want to see how they play out. It may be the Dems win the House but if they do, it will be by a few seats not a landslide. If they win the Senate, it will be by one or two seats. And if the Gop holds, it will be 51-49 or 52-48. Now, we need all Pub purists to come back to the Party and vote for the Pubs in Nov. instead of cutting and running and staying at home.
BTW, I've not seen you post before, but this was really impressive. Excellent research and analysis.
But in 1996, every one of those "reliable" polls were off, many by far more than the MOE, and every last one of them was off in Clinton's direction. Gerry Wasserman of Purdue did a statistical study that found that such a result being arrived at randomly was 240,000:1.
We'll celebrate after the election!
i know those polls in 1996 were off ,but they did predict correctly the winner.
if you are correct, we are about to have the most surprising election since 1948.
Even with generic polls showing the GOP behind in2002 nad 2004, you were hard pressed to find any GOP incumbents in trouble...in 2006 the list of GOP incumbents in trouble is probaly in the range of 20+
But it's still irrelevant. To say that a) the polls have all---EVERY ONE---have been badly off before, and b) that we have evidence from THIS CYCLE that some polls have already been found to be oversampling Dems heavily, equals c) the polls lie . . . most likely, all of them.
[I don't say the WSJ is liberal...]
You need to separate the WSJ news operation from their editorial board. The WSJ news operation is decidedly leftist, while the editorial board is conservative. Zogby is aligned with the WSJ news division, not the editorial side. This is a common misconception that the WSJ is a conservative news outlet, it is not. In fact, a 2004 study, "A Measure of Media Bias," by Tim Groseclose of the University of California, Los Angeles and Jeff Milyo of the University of Missouri, stated that:
"One surprise is the Wall Street Journal, which we find as the most liberal of all 20 news outlets [studied]. We should first remind readers that this estimate (as well as all other newspaper estimates) refers only to the news of the Wall Street Journal; we omitted all data that came from its editorial page. If we included data from the editorial page, surely it would appear more conservative. Second, some anecdotal evidence agrees with our result. For instance, Reed Irvine and Cliff Kincaid (2001) note that "The Journal has had a long-standing separation between its conservative editorial pages and its liberal news pages." Paul Sperry, in an article titled the "Myth of the Conservative Wall Street Journal," notes that the news division of the Journal sometimes calls the editorial division "Nazis." "Fact is," Sperry writes, "the Journal's news and editorial departments are as politically polarized as North and South Korea."
http://www.polisci.ucla.edu/faculty/groseclose/Media.Bias.8.htm
So do not confuse the conservative WSJ editorial division with its left wing news division, which the study found as the most left wing of ALL news outlets studied.
Wow. I was unaware of that study. Thanks for the info; I'll consider it very carefully!!! :)
RD
The same reasoning applies to the WSJ alliance with NBC's polling. Once again, it is the WSJ news department aligning with NBC to do the polling, not the WSJ editorial department. I have heard, on more than one ocassion, the claim because of the affiliation with the 'conservative' WSJ, NBC's polling results can be trusted.
The most accurate polls in 2004 were Rasmussen, Mason-Dixon and SurveyUSA, Rasmussen was # 1 in both sum and spread methods of evaluation.
Let's Go to the Audiotape
Who nailed the election results? Automated pollsters.
By David Kenner and William Saletan
Posted Thursday, Dec. 9, 2004
http://www.slate.com/id/2110860/
I don't know about DeWine because I'm not working for his campaign. Everywhere I go, I hear it's "tough," because of his ridiculously stupid votes. However, the bottom line in OH is this: we have the numbers. Bush won OH by 115,000 votes after losing Montgomery. I'm seeing very little "anti" feeling toward the GOP, but callers have told me that many people are saying, "I will vote a straight GOP ticket, but will leave senator blank."
Will they do that? Who knows. My priority is, a) GET THEM TO THE POLLS. If we do that, we'll have a real, real good chance for b) get them to vote for ALL the GOP. If those two things happen, Republicans will win OH, period.
Last point: in all our walking, dropping lit, etc., from both personal observation and reports from others---and realize, we have people out six days a week in two shifts a day!!!---that there are no Dems out. NONE. ZERO. I asked the Mont. Co. Blackwell chairman about this and she said, "They're just like they were in 2004," which is to say, inefficient, incompetent, and incapable.
Pay attention to the methodology of polls when they come out. If they don't report the 3 things above and the internals (breakdown of the characteristics of the respondents), don't believe them. You'd be surprised how many of these "professional polls" that get widely reported don't do these things-- mostly because of cost and time constraints. The internal polls of the campaigns are done more correctly and follow trends, but they don't get reported for strategic reasons-- usually.
sitetest, I would call it a dead heat which is bad news for Cardin.
All polls should be taken with a grain of salt, nevermind the weighting, but the simple choice of words in a question can skew results. Poll reporting is, in my opinion, lazy journalism. What I find more interesting is that the polls cited most often by the MSM are not those that were the most accurate in the past election. That does not mean those polls will again be the most accurate in this election, thus the reason all should be taken with a grain of salt.
The one thing that none of the polls take into effect, is the effectiveness of the get out the vote efforts of each party. In the close races, that will tell the story of who won and who lost. The report card on the pollsters after this election should be interesting with the wide disparity in figures being reported.
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