Newsletters

Turning the Page to 2021‎

01/14/2021

Dan_Merkle.jpgHappy New Year AAPOR and best wishes for a better and brighter 2021! The year 2020 will be remembered as a particularly challenging one for many of us, both personally and professionally.

A December Fox News poll highlights this sentiment. It found that 67% thought 2020 was a bad year for themselves and their family, a record high. And even more, 78%, said 2020 was a bad year for the country.

For AAPOR members the coronavirus pandemic didn’t only affect us personally. It had a major impact on our work and how we collect data with the shift to working from home and the disruption and changes to the fielding procedures for phone and in-person surveys. The year 2020 also brought myriad threats to the quality of the Census and a particularly challenging election season.

Throughout 2020 AAPOR worked closely with the public relations firm Stanton on messaging related to pre-election polling and other areas central to our mission. AAPOR released ten statements and press releases in 2020: six on the election and polling, three on the Census and one on diversity, equity and inclusion. In particular I want to thank Evans Witt who led AAPOR’s Working Group on Election Messaging that was responsible for crafting messages related to polling and the election.

AAPOR’s media outreach efforts with Stanton resulted in more than 350 media mentions of AAPOR last year and the fielding of more than 30 interview requests. In addition, AAPOR held three webinars for journalists focused on accurately interpreting and reporting pre-election polls and three Reddit AMAs (“Ask Me Anything”) with about 700 comments and 1,100 upvotes.

More work remains to be done. Overall pre-election polls correctly pointed to a Joe Biden win, but the vote was closer in some places than the polls indicated. Conducting pre-election polls is always challenging because it involves the added step of identifying likely voters. This was made even more difficult in the November election because the pandemic upended typical voting patterns.

To avoid the risks of going to their polling places on Election Day, many more people voted early by mail or in person than usual. Furthermore, there were large partisan differences between those who voted early and those who voted on Election Day, driven by Donald Trump’s attacks on mail voting and encouraging his supporters to vote in person on Election Day. The challenge for pre-election polls was not only identifying who would vote early and on Election Day, but also getting the right proportion of each type of voter.

Another challenge for pre-election polling, though not unique to it, is the possibility of differential nonresponse. Donald Trump’s messaging here may also have had an impact. His attacks on polling may have made some of his supporters less likely to agree to be interviewed in pre-election polls.

These and other possibilities are being explored by AAPOR’s Task Force on 2020 Pre-Election Polling which is being chaired by Josh Clinton and includes 19 academic experts and pollsters. They have collected all of the publicly released polls conducted for the 2020 general election and are examining the performance of the polls and factors that influenced poll accuracy. This evaluation will help our field, the press and the public understand poll performance in 2020 with an eye toward making improvements for the future.

I close with a heartfelt wish for a healthy and successful 2021 for all AAPOR members.