Newsletters

Election 2016: What it means for you and for AAPOR

02/01/2016

 

By the time you are reading this, the first of the 2016 Presidential primaries will be over and the first round of media stories about “how did the polls do?” will be flying through your social media feeds. This is the official beginning of what promises to be 10 straight months of such stories and such focus. Even for those of us not involved in election polling, this period will bring heightened scrutiny and attention to all of our work. Your friends, your family members, and your clients will likely bring up the performance of the polls. If election polling is your bread and butter, you are even more attuned to the claims and complaints, and living in the crossfire of every journalist, pundit, individual with a Twitter account, and often the campaigns and the candidates themselves.
 
So what does this mean for AAPOR? Your AAPOR staff and Executive Council are working to position AAPOR as an invaluable and reliable source of information during this contentious and polarized election cycle. We have assembled a “quick response team” of experts available to answer media inquiries about polling, and our website has a growing library of objective, fact-based election briefs on the latest election polling topics written by some of your fellow AAPOR members. The goal is to help journalists, the general public, and other decision makers understand how to evaluate a poll and, more broadly, appreciate the considerable strengths but real limitations of public opinion polling. AAPOR also is committed to remaining the leader in pressing public pollsters to be fully transparent in their methods and highlighting the work of those who are through the Transparency Initiative.
 
But what about you, what can you do to help all of us and the perception of our entire industry?  With the flurry of articles about the “problems with polling,” I urge all of you as researchers, practitioners, scholars, students, and members of this community to take every opportunity you can to point out the value of polling. When you hear a friend or family member talking about some article they read about how polls are terrible, engage them in real conversation and talk about AAPOR and all of the people who are committed to advancing the science of polling and working hard to make sure people’s voices can be heard. Remind people that without polls and surveys, the voices of average people would not play as large a role in our democracy or in our electoral process, and the moneyed special interests would have more influence than they already do. Tell them how election polling in most cases is more than just the horserace and tells us about why voters feel the way they do, something we wouldn't ever know if all we had was a vote count at the end of the day. Tell them that election polling is difficult – things like predicting who is going to turn out to vote on Election Day and reaching subgroups of likely voters in certain states and specific parties have always been challenging – and that’s as true today as it has ever been, and will continue to be, particularly during the primaries. But in fact, the real headline is that general election polls have a remarkably accurate historical record. That doesn’t mean all polls and pollsters have always done well – but on average the industry has a great track record. Defend your election polling colleagues by telling people how committed they are to improving methodologies, innovating and testing new technologies as experimentation and adaptation again become commonplace in our industry (as they did in the past when we switched from face to face to landline modes or from landline only to dual frame landline and cell phone samples) as a result of changes in how people communicate.

Our great strength as a community is our willingness to argue, debate, and vigorously discuss differences in our own beliefs, approaches, real-life experiences in conducting studies, and scientific results and conclusions as we all seek to do our best work in each of our given arenas. However, at a time when it seems that most commentators are focused on only one side of the story – let’s all help remind them that polling, and especially election polling, is a crucial aspect of our democracy and that the vast majority of the people involved take their role seriously and are working hard to give us all the best insights into the 2016 election.