The ABCs of the 2004 Preelection Polls
By V.
Lance Tarrance, Jr.
Despite
living in the Information Age with its seemingly instant
precision, the survey research and campaign industries
learned another hard lesson on election night of November
2004: Sample surveys of political opinion are really
just the ABC science at workthat is, the science
of "Almost Being Certain." The reality is
that random sample preelection surveys are indeed precise
information tools, but not too distant from those used
by military intelligence in a fast-paced waras
if we are "pretty sure that WMDs are there, but
we are not absolutely certain."
The known statistical error of probability
sampling and the unsystematic error unknown in the
administrative processes of polling combine to give
us a calculated yet approximated margin
of error that yields results of "almost being
certain"hence, the axiom that all political
polling is simply a "projection" at one point
in time and not a "prediction." Yet, contrary
to that axiom, many of the polling firms venture such
a prediction on the eve of each election with the allocation
of undecided voters in nonstandard ways, all of which
complicates the known universe ever more. The well-regarded
bipartisan Battleground Poll this past election yielded,
interestingly enough, two totally different "final
predictions" (obviously using different procedures
for allocating undecided voters) from the same
data set that was jointly collected.
But
there are yet more error-prone areas to factor into
any estimate. This brings us to the art, and not the
science, of identifying so-called likely voters. Each
polling firm today is forced to develop its own likely-voter
"models" because of the one out of every two
eligible citizens who does not participate, or the one
in four registered voters who does not show up at election
time. This recalibration is not science, as any impartial
inspection would testify.
Gallup has had one of the more reliable
determinations of likely voters, as was demonstrated
especially vividly during the 1994 midterm elections,
when the organization discovered the late "Contract
with America" surge to the polls. Gallup has
more or less set the industry standard by using seven
questions on their preelection surveys to determine
who is likely to turn out to vote. They attempt to measure
campaign interest, knowledge of the neighborhood polling
place, various past-vote histories, intention to vote,
registration, and commitment to participate. It should
be noted that a slightly inflated estimate of intention
to vote can skew survey results just enough to produce
a subtle swing in vote preference. Other organizations
have their own approaches, equally prone to having their
determinations thrown off by small misestimates. With
such a variety of techniques trying to identify probable
voters and screen out the least likely ones, projections
of the likely vote are not foolproof.
So,
let's seeBush achieved his popular-vote victory
with a plus-3 percent margin, and each of the national
surveys reported a margin of error of also plus- or
minus-3-4 percent. The
average spread among fourteen polling firms from
October 27 until November 1 was one-half of Bush's eventual
margin (plus-l.5 percent), an estimate well within the
margin of error. The "outcome direction" was
also correctBush was ahead when all of the
reported polls were averaged and, indeed, won.
It should also be recalled that there
was a "tectonic shift" in August (between
the party conventions) from Kerry to Bush (Kerry had
been the lead for some four months prior to that!),
and a consistent lead (albeit a small one) after that
for Bush during all the ups and downs of September and
October. These two factors largely account for why the
Bush campaign team were "cautiously optimistic"
on election day and so shocked at the early exit-poll
results, which showed Kerry ahead.
Let's
look at these fourteen organizations and their preelection
estimates. Ten of the firms had their likely-voter results
in the correct direction; that is, about three-quarters
had it "mostly right" for Bush. The most notable
of the firms that were at variance with the Bush outcome
were FOX News's Opinion Dynamics poll (plus-2 percent
for Kerry) and Gallup's CNN/USA Today poll (only
tied). However, the Gallup pollsters, before they allocated
the undecided vote, had the election results nearly
dead-on, with a plus-2 percent margin for Bush, and
they just adjusted wrongly. If these two organizations
had been of lesser stature or influence no one would
have cared; however, missing the direction of the outcome
is usually considered a cardinal sin in the expensive
world of campaign professionals.
It should be pointed out (if not forever
remembered) that there were two organizations that did
get the outcome precisely right. They were CBS News/New
York Times and the Pew Research Center, each with
a 3 percent lead for Bush, even though their timing
and sample sizes varied considerably.
Since
battleground states (read, the electoral college) were
the featured item of the '04 presidential election,
most national polling firms were forced to expend new
energy and more money in many of them (so as to augment
their "popular vote" estimates to their clients).
This is where the performance record becomes murkier.
Florida and Ohio were absolutely first-tier in importance,
while Wisconsin, Iowa, and New Mexico were mostly second-tier,
with Minnesota-Pennsylvania-Michigan third-tier (and
their importance indeed fading away on election night.)
Let's first consider Florida, a state
that eventually went for Bush by five percentage points.
Of
the nine or so polling organizations among the fourteen
discussed above that delved into the quirky politics
of Florida, less than half had estimates with the correct
direction, while three were "almost certain"
that Kerry was in front. To be fair, the average of
preelection polls in Florida showed at best plus-1 percent
for Bush, so all the estimates were going to be tricky
no matter what the outcome. Nevertheless, two notable
organizations were in the "missed-it" categoryFOX
News had Kerry winning by five percentage points (a
swing of ten points) in Florida, while Gallup also had
Kerry winning by three percentage points (a swing of
eight points) there. (Both
firms also inaccurately had Betty Castor winning
the U.S. Senate seat in Florida.) There were two other
firms, however, who had it "mostly correct"the
Rasmussen and Mason-Dixon polls estimated a margin of
victory of three to four percentage points for Bush,
a good mark in a state becoming more and more complicated
to measure.
And what about Ohio? This was the most
critical subnational area in the entire election, and
one in which the politics were not as unstable as in
Florida. Bush won Ohio by 2 percent of the total vote,
and the average of all the preelection polls was also
about 2 percent, a much better correlation than in Florida.
Of
the eight organizations of our fourteen conducting work
in Ohio, 90 percent had it "mostly correct"
in their polling. Unfortunately for Gallup's entry into
the Ohio contest, theirs was the only estimate in the
wrong direction (plus-4 for Kerry), which means they
missed the trend in both of the first-tier battleground
states.
What
does all this really tell us? First of all, polling
is still an "almost being certain" science,
and partisan overreach must be curtailed. Second, nationally
skilled polling organizations may not always be as reliable
for individual state estimates, as they may lack awareness
of many of the "local knowledge rules" that
are at play in each of them. Third, because contemporary
elections are so hotly contested, over-canvassed, and
fraught with negative images ("The wrong war in
the wrong place at the wrong time"), likely-voter
models can be slightly off.
Survey estimates should always be considered
an important part of our political environment, but
not the environment itself. After all, we all work with
a very tricky political map nowadays, as well as with
a science that can only produce ABC estimates, not certitudes.
Lance Tarrance, Jr., was a director
of the Gallup Organization from 1987 to 1993 and the
president of Gallup China from 1993 to 1996. He was
president and founder of The Tarrance Group (1977-93)
and is a member of the American Political Science Association.
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