Election polling is facing yet another reckoning following its uneven-at-best performance in this year鈥檚 voting.
Although the outcome in the 2020 presidential race remained uncertain the next day, it was evident that polls collectively faltered, overall, in providing Americans with clear indications as to how the election would turn out.
And that misstep promises to resonate through the field of survey research, which was battered four years ago when Donald Trump carried states such as Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, where polls indicated he had almost no chance of winning. Prominent, also went off-target in 2016.
Those failings deepened the embarrassment for a field that has suffered through 鈥 but has survived 鈥 a variety of lapses and surprises since the mid-1930s. Many of those flubs and failings are described in my latest book, 鈥.鈥
Criticism was in some quarters Wednesday. Politico鈥檚 widely followed 鈥淧laybook鈥 newsletter was notably scathing. 鈥淭he polling industry is a wreck,鈥 it , 鈥渁nd should be blown up.鈥
Many Surprises
While that assessment seems extreme, especially given polling鈥檚 resiliency over the decades, the poll-driven expectation that former Vice President Joe Biden would lead Democrats in a sweeping 鈥溾 went unfulfilled. Biden may still win the presidency, but it will not be in a landslide.
Biden鈥檚 overall polling lead, as compiled by RealClearPolitics.com, on the morning of Election Day. A little more than 24 hours later, his lead in the national popular vote was almost 3 percentage points.
Pollsters often seek comfort, and protection, from critics in asserting that pre-election surveys are not predictions. But the nearer they are to the election, the more reliable polls ought to be. And a number of individual pre-election polls were embarrassingly wide of the mark.
A notable example was the final Washington Post/ABC News poll in Wisconsin, released last week, which gave Biden a . The outcome there was still undecided Wednesday morning, but the margin surely will not be close to 17 points.
Indeed, the polling surprises were many and included Senate races such as those in Maine, where Republican to win a fifth term, and South Carolina, reelection despite polls that indicated a much closer race. after his victory became clear, 鈥淭o all the pollsters out there, you have no idea what you鈥檙e doing.鈥
It appears that Republicans will keep control of the U.S. Senate despite expectations, fueled by polls, that control of the upper house was likely to flip to the Democrats.
Polling Problems Not New
The 2020 election may represent another chapter in since George Gallup, Elmo Roper and Archibald Crossley initiated their sample surveys during the 1936 presidential campaign. The most dramatic polling failure in U.S. presidential elections came in 1948, when President , the pundits and the press to win reelection over the heavily favored Republican nominee, Thomas E. Dewey.
The surprise this year is not remotely akin to the epic polling failure of 1948. But it is striking how polling missteps are so varied, and almost never the same 鈥 much as of unhappy families: each 鈥渋s unhappy in its own way.鈥
Factors that gave rise to this year鈥檚 embarrassment may not be clear for weeks or months, but it is no secret that election polling has been confronted with several . Among them is the conducted by operators using random dialing techniques.
That technique used to be considered the gold standard of survey research. But response rates to telephone-based polls have been in decline for years, forcing polling organizations to look to, and experiment with, other sampling methods, including internet-based techniques. But none of them has emerged as polling鈥檚 new gold standard.
One of polling鈥檚 most notable innovators was Warren Mitofsky, who years ago his counterparts that there鈥檚 鈥渁 lot of room for humility in polling. Every time you get cocky, you lose.鈥
in 2006. His counsel rings true today.
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