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More on the unreliabilty of polling. Even the Biden campaign is now stating polls are not accurate. Obviously the methodology needs to be changed dramatically if polling is ever going to be a trusted and reliable source of information again:
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2020/10/17/biden-campaign-admits-the-polls-are-off-n2578277
Biden Campaign Manager Confirms What We All Knew About These 2020 Polls
Matt VespaMatt Vespa| @mvespa1|Posted: Oct 17, 2020 3:45 AM
The take away from all this is polls are pretty much dead as a source of information anymore, but even using "push polls" as a form of disinformation is also no longer effective - everyone pretty much discounts polls anymore. I would suggest the same issues of methodology and unreliability also affect polls in Canada and throughout most of the Western world.
Of course the question of what can be used to replace polls is also fraught with issues. "Big Data" models based on information scraped from the Internet not only suffer "self selection" issues, but also deliberate manipulation, such as we saw when Twitter and Facebook blocked any posting or reposting of the New York Post story of Hunter Biden's emails, and this is far more pernicious since it is much mroe difficult to see the data or the underlying algorithms, not to mention any manual "placing fingers on the scale". Most people also don't realize there is an entire ecosystem of much smaller social media sites like Gab.ai, Ideka or Minds, which also act as conduits of information on smaller scales.
Farther upthread I mentioned an article which suggested a possible outcome based on looking at economic data such as ordering materials, but that requires a large chanin of inferences, and monitoring large numbers of vendors for prolonged periods of time (and of course other factors can come into play - for example candidates from previous elections can simply recycle a lot of materials like campaign signs).
So what is the answer? I really don't know. Some analytical methodology incorporating multiple information sources is obviously going to be needed, but which information sources are suitable and what sorts of weighting each different source should get will need lots of study.
https://townhall.com/tipsheet/mattvespa/2020/10/17/biden-campaign-admits-the-polls-are-off-n2578277
Biden Campaign Manager Confirms What We All Knew About These 2020 Polls
Matt VespaMatt Vespa| @mvespa1|Posted: Oct 17, 2020 3:45 AM
We’ve been saying it for weeks now. The 2020 polls are trash. Things just don’t make sense. Joe Biden cannot be up by 10 points over Trump and be in a dead heat with him in Miami-Dade County, the most populous Democratic county in the Sunshine State. I’ve seen polls where college-educated voters are oversampled. Democrats are oversampled. And some firms haven’t moved away from registered voter models. Zipcodes where Trump Democrats live are bypassed and suburban GOP voters are targeted more than rural ones for the obvious reason that the former group is hostile to Trump. Also, yes, there is a shy Trump vote this year. It’s projected to be larger, with urban black women likely to fall into this category. Also, not everyone is as forthcoming with these pollsters over the phone. We have data on that too. What about young people? Youth interest in this election has dipped to levels not seen since 2000. We could see one million fewer young people vote in this cycle.
And if Biden is ahead by that much, he could hunker down in his bunker until Election Day. There’s no need for an ad blitz either, but look at where he’s campaigning folks. If you’re up by this much, there’s no need to give a speech in Detroit. Some liberal folks think conservatives are in denial mode. Wrong. Even the Biden camp admitted yesterday that they’re not up by double-digits in the polls (via Fox News):
Biden campaign manager Jen O'Malley Dillon, in grassroots summit, emphasizes that their polling does NOT show a double-digit lead nationally.
"Please take the fact that we are not ahead by double digits"
“Those are inflated national public polling numbers” pic.twitter.com/v95za3XRGZ
— Shane Goldmacher (@ShaneGoldmacher) October 16, 2020
Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden’s campaign manager warned against trusting inflated national polling numbers released this week, which showed Biden in a double-digit lead over incumbent candidate President Trump.
"Please take the fact that we are not ahead by double digits,” Jen O’Malley said Friday, according to a New York Times reporter. “Those are inflated national public polling numbers.”
Polls released this week by NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist and NBC News/Wall Street Journal show Biden ahead of Trump in national polls by 11 percent.
Although Real Clear Politics, which compares several polls and combines the average has Biden in a lead ahead of Trump by 8.9 percent in national polls.
Though national polls are less important than key state polls, and Biden will need to secure a number of swing states.
Yeah, things aren’t looking too hot for Biden on the swing state front. Trafalgar, the most accurate battleground state pollster for the 2016 cycle, pretty much says as of now that Trump is headed for re-election. Trump has, among other things, the enthusiasm gap on his side by a huge margin. Since 1988, the candidate who has held that edge has won the election. I think that’s why Biden’s campaign manager admitted this; she’s popping warning flares early.
The take away from all this is polls are pretty much dead as a source of information anymore, but even using "push polls" as a form of disinformation is also no longer effective - everyone pretty much discounts polls anymore. I would suggest the same issues of methodology and unreliability also affect polls in Canada and throughout most of the Western world.
Of course the question of what can be used to replace polls is also fraught with issues. "Big Data" models based on information scraped from the Internet not only suffer "self selection" issues, but also deliberate manipulation, such as we saw when Twitter and Facebook blocked any posting or reposting of the New York Post story of Hunter Biden's emails, and this is far more pernicious since it is much mroe difficult to see the data or the underlying algorithms, not to mention any manual "placing fingers on the scale". Most people also don't realize there is an entire ecosystem of much smaller social media sites like Gab.ai, Ideka or Minds, which also act as conduits of information on smaller scales.
Farther upthread I mentioned an article which suggested a possible outcome based on looking at economic data such as ordering materials, but that requires a large chanin of inferences, and monitoring large numbers of vendors for prolonged periods of time (and of course other factors can come into play - for example candidates from previous elections can simply recycle a lot of materials like campaign signs).
So what is the answer? I really don't know. Some analytical methodology incorporating multiple information sources is obviously going to be needed, but which information sources are suitable and what sorts of weighting each different source should get will need lots of study.