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Polls and polling

Polls and polling. 30 October 2013. Polls and 2013 Elections. So who won?. Was it predictable?. In US and elsewhere, economy plus war a good predictor of results Could we have predicted Czech results in August? What was expected:

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Polls and polling

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  1. Polls and polling 30 October 2013

  2. Polls and 2013 Elections

  3. So who won?

  4. Was it predictable? • In US and elsewhere, economy plus war a good predictor of results • Could we have predicted Czech results in August? • What was expected: • Incumbent parties, especially ODS, will do worse due to scandals/economy • Opposition should do better, but is CSSD the opposition when Rusnok is PM? • What was unexpected: • Should new parties have done so well? • Should presidents have so little influence

  5. Economy and the vote - US

  6. Journalists’ model of elections • Voters are influenced by day-to-day events of campaign • Mistakes (gaffes) by candidates and parties matter • Voters have short memories – rely on most recent events • Candidates can fool voters by changing policy positions • People vote for character traits, not policies or issues • Who would you want to have a beer with?

  7. Does the campaign explain Czech results? • Did CSSD run the best campaign, but fade at the end? • Were campaigns of ANO and KSCM also strong? • Did ODS (and TOP 09) run bad campaigns? What should they have changed? • Could Zeleni, SPOZ, Hlavavzhuru done better? • Did sympathy with leaders matter?

  8. Gelman and King on variability of polls • Voters vote based on enlightened preferences • At start of campaign voters don’t have necessary information • Positions of parties on major issues and competence • Campaign provides voters with necessary information • By time of election, voters vote “correctly” • But why do polls start in a different place?

  9. Did Czech voters become enlightened?Were polls accurate?

  10. New trends • Aggregating large numbers of polls • Don’t pay attention to individual poll results • Newspapers have incentive to exaggerate • Hard to tell if which poll is an outlier • Other technologies: Twitter, Google searches • New paper by Rojas: Tweets predict results • Conduct your own survey/experiment: Mechanical Turk • https://www.mturk.com/mturk/

  11. Your experiences with exit polls • How difficult to ask people? • Who answered and who didn’t? • What sort of reasons did they give? • How do you explain results?

  12. What are polls measuring?

  13. Why polls are good • Strong biases due to friends, colleagues, neighborhood, media • 1998: “I don’t know anyone who approves of Clinton” • 2006: “I don’t know anyone who approves of Bush” • Very hard to make accurate estimates • Old method of public opinion: size and enthusiasm of crowds • We tend to think we know more than we do

  14. Difficulty of estimating

  15. Answers

  16. Does will of the people exist? • Who is the people? • Did the Czech people reject politics as usual? • More than 60% of seats in parliament go to parties from last parliament (>70% if count KDU-CSL) • Most people are not very ideological • Most people do not have strong political opinions • Most people take cues from parties and political leaders • Adopt positions favored by preferred parties/politicians

  17. Will of people depends on institutions • How would will be different under majoritarian electoral rules? • Arrow’s impossibility theorem: no means of aggregation can satisfy simple set of conditions • Transitivity: A>B and B>C means A>C • Irrelevant alternatives don’t matter (cf., ice skating) • Consider these preferences • 30%: CSSD>ANO>KSCM • 30%: ANO>KSCM>CSSD • 30%: KSCM>CSSD>ANO • ANO versus CSSD: CSSD wins 2 to 1 • CSSD versus KSCM: KSCM wins 2 to 1 • KSCM versus ANO: ANO wins 2 to 1

  18. Theory of survey response - Zaller • People don’t have “true preferences” which they reveal to pollster • “Most of what gets measured as public opinion does not exist except in the presence of a pollster” • RAS model • Receive information from elites (depends on political awareness) • Accept (or reject) this information (depends on whether it conforms with prior beliefs) • Sample considerations available in head at time of survey • Less aware voters: receive less information, but accept more – opinions vary • More aware voters: receive more information, but filter it better

  19. Monica Lewinsky’s contribution to political science • Clinton’s approval ratings go up after scandal • How is this possible? • People usually don’t think about president • Scandal causes them to think more about his accomplishments • They distinguish his personal life from politics • They realize that he does a good job as president • A revised view • Media and elites not so powerful • People influenced by fundamentals (eg, economy)

  20. Problems with polls • Question wording effects • Double-barreled questions: Do you approve or disapprove of the way the government is handling the country’s foreign and domestic affairs? • Leading phrases: The government supports introducing tuition for university students. What do you think? • Question order effects • Surveys typically begin with attitudes (non-threatening and interesting – eg, what is most important problem in the country) • Then intentions (who will you vote for) and past behaviors (who did you vote for) • Demographics (few will want to answer at the start) • Rising percentage of non-respondents • Social desirability bias: desire to please interviewer • Controversial questions on gender and race • Bradley effect: black candidates do worse in elections than polls

  21. But a large amount of stability in CZ public opinion – is Czech public rational?

  22. Who is left out of polls?

  23. What do the super-rich believe? • Very hard to contact – they don’t have listed numbers or answer the phone, many layers of protection • Colleagues in US contacting those with average income > $1 million • Findings • Very interested and active in politics • Frequent contact with elected politicians and government officials • Conservative economic beliefs • Worried about budget, more willing to cut social programs, maintain low taxes, reduce regulation • How much more influential on politics?

  24. What about the poor? • Exclusion bias: Are people who don’t answer or answer “don’t know” different than others? • Poor subject to value conflicts on issues of redistribution: freedom and individualism versus fairness and equality • Poor have fewer resources and time to gather and process information to resolve conflict • More likely to answer “Don’t know” to questions on welfare state • Are we underestimating support for welfare state?

  25. One of my projects • Database of policy preferences from public opinion polls • Disaggregate by income, education, and gender • Whose opinions are most likely to become policy?

  26. Gender differences small

  27. Differences not surprising • Men favor • Allow drinkers to drive • Allow nuclear weapons on territory • Allow Mein Kampf to be published • Finish Temelin reactor • Women favor • No export of weapons • Reduce speed limit in villages • Stricter gun laws • Forbid tobacco ads

  28. A thesis project inspired by elections • How do new parties differ from old? • Programs • Length, coverage, promises • Parliament • Party discipline, attendance, speeches, proposals, amendments • Government • Laws proposed by ministers, # passed/rejected

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