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View Full Version : If Gallup is right, Tuesday will be a long night for Democrat party



Little-Acorn
11-03-2012, 04:00 PM
A pretty good explanation of the odd phenomenon where so many polls assume the same numbers of Dems and Republicans will vote in 2012, as voted in 2008 (far more Dems than Republicans).

And what will happen if they vote, instead, the way they did in 2010 (more Republicans than Dems).

Which do YOU think is more likely?

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http://www.nationalreview.com/articles/332386/parsing-polls-michael-g-franc#

Parsing the Polls
If Gallup is right, Tuesday will be a long night for the Democratic party.

By Michael G. Franc
November 3, 2012 12:00 A.M.

Last week, the Gallup Organization provided more fodder for the debate over whether this year’s polls are skewed due to a systematic over-representation of Democrats in the samples. If Gallup has it right, Governor Romney’s lead may be several percentage points greater than the most recent round of polls suggests.

Gallup reviewed all of its interviews with “likely voters” conducted since October 1. Its conclusion: “The composition of the electorate [old vs. young, male vs. female, upper income vs. lower income etc. -LA] for the 2012 presidential election is looking quite similar to what it was in 2008 as well as 2004.” Indeed, whether the sample is broken out on the basis of race, gender, level of education, or geographic location, the percentage of likely voters in each subset is no different than it was four years earlier.

But Gallup uncovered one very significant shift in this year’s voting electorate. There has been a remarkable movement toward the Republican party. As Gallup reports:


The largest changes in the composition of the electorate compared with the last presidential election concern the partisan affiliation of voters. Currently, 46% of likely voters identify as Democrats or lean Democratic, compared with 54% in 2008. But in 2008, Democrats enjoyed a wide 12-point advantage in party affiliation among national adults, the largest Gallup had seen in at least two decades. More recently, Americans have been about as likely to identify as or lean Republican as to identify as or lean Democratic. Consequently, the electorate has also become less Democratic and more Republican in its political orientation than in 2008. In fact, the party composition of the electorate this year looks more similar to the electorate in 2004 than 2008.

If anything, Gallup understates the case. In 2008, Democrats enjoyed a decisive ten-point advantage in partisan affiliation, 39 percent to 29 percent. When undecided voters were pushed to choose a party, the Democrats’ edge grew by another two points, to 54 percent to 42 percent. Yet in the Gallup polls conducted since October 1, the two parties have pulled even, with Republicans actually ahead by a statistically insignificant percentage point, 36 percent to 35 percent. After being pushed to choose a party, likely voters give the Republicans a further boost, resulting in an overall three-point advantage of 49 percent to 46 percent.

If you are keeping score, in slightly less than four years President Obama has presided over an eleven-point decrease in his party’s standing with the American people, 15 points if you include those voters who “lean” one way or the other.

To be sure, the most recent spate of national polls include more Republicans than did the surveys conducted earlier in October. Nevertheless, they still give more advantage to the Democrats than Gallup’s aggregate data suggest should be the case. ABC/Wall Street Journal’s most recent poll, for example, includes 34 percent Democrats and 30 percent Republicans, the Investors Business Daily poll sets the Democrats’ advantage at seven points (38 percent to 31 percent), and an Associated Press survey comes in two percentage points more Democratic than Republican.

Correcting these polls so that there was a Republican edge in the sample of voters consistent with Gallup’s finding would hand Romney a lead between five to ten points. Imagine the run on smelling salts at Mother Jones and MSNBC if that were to happen?

tailfins
11-03-2012, 04:04 PM
Actually, this is another sign of the decline of our society. There's more interest in manipulating than informing. I'm beginning to think it's ALL noise and thanks to that noise, nobody really knows who is ahead.

jimnyc
11-03-2012, 04:20 PM
I believe I was told that Gallup leans to the right, so your story is skewered. :coffee: (I think Gallup and Rasmussen are perhaps the 2 best in reality)

aboutime
11-03-2012, 05:18 PM
Actually, this is another sign of the decline of our society. There's more interest in manipulating than informing. I'm beginning to think it's ALL noise and thanks to that noise, nobody really knows who is ahead.



tailfins. As I have been saying here, and other places for years. Polls mean nothing.

NOBODY, but NOBODY knows how Tuesday's election will turn out. PERIOD.

Tyr-Ziu Saxnot
11-03-2012, 07:31 PM
Watch the media start calling it a win for obama early on like they did for Kerry. They do that hoping to get the voters that havent voted yet to change thier vote to go with the "winner" that they declared! Also this time to lead more credence to obama's claim that it was stolen when he loses. In short , they are scum deserving of justice..
Someday perhaps it will be delivered, I just pray that Im around to see it when/if it ever happens!-Tyr

aboutime
11-03-2012, 08:38 PM
Watch the media start calling it a win for obama early on like they did for Kerry. They do that hoping to get the voters that havent voted yet to change thier vote to go with the "winner" that they declared! Also this time to lead more credence to obama's claim that it was stolen when he loses. In short , they are scum deserving of justice..
Someday perhaps it will be delivered, I just pray that Im around to see it when/if it ever happens!-Tyr


Tyr. A bit of comical, but happy news I heard yesterday. My wife was watching tv, and whoever was talking, was laughing about how the WHITE HOUSE was preparing to LOSE...trying to decide WHO TO BLAME, or WHO'S FAULT IT WILL BE for Obama's loss.

Not a bad idea. But when you think about that. How will anyone know WHO to blame if they haven't been keeping track of the lies Obama, and the people around him have been repeating.

Truth is. IF Obama does lose. I think WE all know who will be to blame for that. George W. Bush...of course.