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Election Reporting and Opinion Polls

Election Reporting and Opinion Polls. Political Reporting (JN 513/815). Lecture Outline. 1. Election Campaigns 2. Media & Elections 3. Public Opinion 4. Public Opinion Polls 5. Journalistic Reportage of Polls. Election Campaigns.

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Election Reporting and Opinion Polls

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  1. Election Reporting and Opinion Polls Political Reporting (JN 513/815)

  2. Lecture Outline • 1. Election Campaigns • 2. Media & Elections • 3. Public Opinion • 4. Public Opinion Polls • 5. Journalistic Reportage of Polls

  3. Election Campaigns • Elections are predictable and unpredictable affairs – characterized by risk-free, highly professionalized modes of communication but they also throw up random events, gaffes, etc.

  4. Election Campaigns • Election campaigns now more important because of increased volatility in the electorate with increasing party dealignment, less class identity, greater individualization, etc. • Alternative argument that campaigns have minimal effects and that pre-existing political allegiances and levels of economic prosperity dictate electoral success.

  5. Media & Elections • Election campaigns are contests between forms of political control and the media scrutiny of political performance. • Media logic argues that the coverage of political events and issues must be compatible with the media’s ‘scheduling and time considerations, entertainment values, and images of the audience’ (Rudd and Hayward 2009, p. 91).

  6. Media & Elections • The media matter because: • (i) they provide information to allow voters to match their preferences with particular candidates or parties • (ii) they give long-term political information that helps to socialize voters into particular party preferences and • (iii) in close elections or on critical issues when voters are confused or even angry, media coverage can sway an election. (Oates 2008, p. 92)

  7. Public Opinion • A healthy democracy is informed by the widespread, free and considered expressions of public opinion. • “Citizens behave as a public body when they confer in an unrestricted fashion – that is, with the guarantee of freedom of assembly and association and the freedom to express and publish their opinions – about matters of general interest” (Habermas, 1989: p. 49).

  8. Public Opinion • The history of public opinion expression and measurement have moved from: • more unstructured to structured forms of expression • from more public to privatised forms of expression • from ‘bottom-up’ to ‘top-down’ forms of expression (Herbst, 1991). • Modern public opinion polls started in 1935 when George Gallup began conducting scientific and statistically valid opinion polls.

  9. Public Opinion • Public opinion continues to animate contemporary democracy – basis for political action and journalistic inquiry • Public opinion also remains productive and unpredictable phenomenon.

  10. Public Opinion • Public opinion is the ongoing conversation or dialogue that a public has about the representations of it, the representations of public opinion. • “The media proposes, publics form themselves by reading what is proposed, and images of what those readings decide are proposed back to the public via opinion polls and surveys” (Wark, qtd in Craig, 2004: pp. 160-1).

  11. Public Opinion • Forms of public opinion: • Different types of opinion polls • Voting • Letters to the Editor, talkback radio • Emails/Letter writing • Petitions, lobbying • Media representations of public opinion – vox pops, ‘the worm’ in political debates, etc.

  12. Public Opinion • Demonstrations, Riots • Social media – Twitter, Facebook, etc. • Graffiti, culture-jamming

  13. Public Opinion Polls • ‘Call-in’ polls • ‘Push-polling’ • Reputable, statistically-valid opinion polls - polls conducted by independent pollsters, media companies, political parties.

  14. Public Opinion Polls • Major UK pollsters include: • YouGov - http://yougov.co.uk/publicopinion/ • IpsosMORI - http://www.ipsos-mori.com • British Polling Council - Association of market research companies:http://www.britishpollingcouncil.org/objects.html

  15. Public Opinion Polls • Political parties, public groups and news organisations can also conduct their own polls. • The rise of the ‘electoral-professional’ political party has meant that the modern political party concentrates on short-term, shallow support of floating voters – hence their heavy reliance on public opinion polls. • Opinion polls quantify public opinion, creating definite, impartial information, and rendering public opinion ‘knowable’

  16. Public Opinion Polls • Probability theory dictates that a relatively small sample can accurately record the opinion levels of very large populations, providing that the random sample has been correctly compiled. • Sample size 200, 95% chance that result will fall within 6.9% of poll outcomeSample size 500, 95% chance that results will fall within 4.4% of poll outcomeSample size 1000, 95% chance that results will fall within 3.1% of poll outcomeSample size 2000, 95% chance that results will fall within 2.2% of poll outcome

  17. Public Opinion Polls • Opinion polls can be criticised as a means of social control: • Transformation from a voluntary to an externally subsidized manner • Transformation from a behavioural to an attitudinal phenomenon • Transformation from the property of groups in society to an attribute of individuals • Removes individuals’ control over their own expressions of opinion by transforming them from spontaneous assertions to a constrained response. (Ginsberg).

  18. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • Democratic function of representing and reporting on public opinion. • But opinion polls are also a valuable source of news – new, topical and exclusive information. • Greater autonomy in the production of news – altered balance of power because politicians have to respond to public opinion

  19. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • As Stromback (2009) notes, the media rely too much on opinion polls (particularly during election campaigns) (p. 56) • Stromback(2009) study also finds: • “The main result of this qualitative analysis is that the people is strangely absent from almost all poll results in the investigated media.” (p. 66) and • “The media use the polls as a tool for serving their own purposes, rather than to give voice to the people.” (p. 67)

  20. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • Journalists are criticised because they present the election as a ‘horse race’, as a campaign contest rather than debate about issues and policies • Horse-race coverage - gives us clear cut winners and losers, it facilitates journalistic ‘objectivity’ because journalism is not dragged into the difficulty of ‘interpreting’ issues. • Horse-race reportage is facilitated by the use of opinion polls. • Underdog and bandwagon effects

  21. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • Stromback study, however, found an increase in poll focus on issues over three Swedish elections 1998-2006 (but from low base) and a fall (from high levels) of horse race focus in polls over those elections (p. 63)

  22. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • We need to be careful about imposing a simplistic binary between issue and game framing. Journalists often present issues through discussion of game strategy. As Graber (2006, p. 234) reminds us: • “there is more issue coverage, albeit unsystematic, than scholars have acknowledged in the past. … Audiences often overlook commentary about issues because it is embedded in many horse race stories and discussions of candidates’ qualifications.”

  23. Journalistic Reportage of Polls • Good journalistic reportage of opinion polls should include the following: • The questions asked; • The date of the poll; • The size of the sample & the sample error; • The method of polling (phone, etc); • How the random sample was compiled.

  24. Seminar • 1. When the news media discuss public opinion are they reporting on a product of their own creation or are they articulating the views of the society that exist independently of the news media? • 2. The Times article analysis

  25. References • Craig, G. (2004) The Media, Politics and Public Life. Crows Nest: Allen & Unwin. • Ginsberg, B. (1986) The Captive Public: How mass opinion promotes state power. New York: Basic Books. • Graber, D. (2006) Elections in the Internet Age, in: Mass Media & American Politics, 7th ed., CQ Press, Washington D.C., pp. 218-247.  • Habermas, J. (1989) The Structural Transformation of the Public Sphere: An inquiry into a category of bourgeois society. Trans. T. Burger with F. Lawrence. Cambridge: Polity. • Herbst, S. (1991) Classical Democracy, Polls, and Public Opinion: Theoretical Frameworks for Studying the Development of Public Sentiment. Communication Theory, 1, 225-38. • Oates, S. (2008) Introduction to Media and Politics. Los Angeles: Sage. • Rudd, C. and Hayward, J. (2009) Newspaper Coverage, in: Rudd, C. Hayward, J. & Craig, G. (eds.) Informing Voters? Politics, Media and the New Zealand Election 2008, Pearson, Auckland, pp. 90-107. • Stromback, J 2009 ‘VoxPopuli or Vox Media? Opinion Polls and the Swedish Media’, Javnost: The Public, vol. 16, no. 3, pp. 55-70.

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