On Opinion Polls: General Randomised Sample Head Emptying
Two polls then. These are at quite different points in the range of likelihoods. Which are I think The Great Escape, a minimal Labour hold; The Escape, a hung parliament; The Trial, a minimal Con gain; and The Romp, with Faust the poster boy in complete control. For how long nobody knows. Could we even see the paradox of the better he does, the less good his prospects of maintaining the whip hand?
The ComRes one for The Sunday Mirror shows Cameron already on the ropes basically. 4% worse off than the last of their series. Perhaps the Osborne liability coming home to roost? Perhaps the all-round nastiness of yer Goves and yer Graylings? Of Cameron himself? Perhaps just a case of every poll a maverick poll? But, Hurrah anyway!
The other one is far more interesting in lots of ways, though the arguments below apply to both. The ICM "target seats" poll for Murdoch's Tory-friendly News of the World assumes Labour will lose every seat where 4% swing or under does the business for the Conservatives. And then it looks at the 97 next most vulnerable seats where it's Labour incumbent and Tories insurgent. Swings of 4.1% up to 10% required.
Scary stuff when a 10% swing applies. Someone with a majority of 19.9% (say 11,000 or so) loses by a smidge with a 10% party-to-party swing. Consider Manchester Withington 2005 and you're in the right ballpark.
I'm going to include more or less the full legend from UK Polling Report at this point. Followed by a couple of comments I've made. You can also see this, read other comments and join in HERE:
Reading this, with some inkling of what was likely, I asked:
Where are the numbers polled, level of DK-WS-NV and the methodology for this one? Lack of this hampers evaluation of the importance or not of this. Also any work on squeezability of LDs in these? The old would you rather C or L for this crew could be illuminating. They have 14%. The margin between the real contestants is 3%. Plus it the usual +/- lots margin for error?
Give us the footnotes, or expect us to shrug and say "who knows what if anything that means then"?
UK Polling Reports' Anthony Wells responded promptly:
Chris, they’ll all be on ICM’s website in due course. Basically though –
WNV 10%
Ref 7%
D/K 23%
Which led me to this response. Earning part of my living administering polls I shouldn't perhaps be quite so cynical and questioning:
So, basically we have 600 punters who actually express an opinion in 97 seats meaning an average of 6 and a bit per target constituency? Plus some farming out of the DK-WS-NVs.
There will be serious to very serious over-reporting of voting at all last time as 80-90% is not where we were at turn out wise, plus confusion and mis-remembering of the ones who did actually vote.
3% margin of error and 5-6% of possibly tactical LDs as well? In some seats I think a very large proportion – more than 39% – will actually go tactical. Seems to me these things are a very blunt instrument indeed.
Doing quite a bit of phone iD for one of the parties, and face-to-face for one of the majors, not ICM, it beats me why anyone gets too excited by these things. Within the margin of error we have way way lower Tory gains cf ComRes, and we also have landslide territory.
However this has been carried out there’s nowt as queer as folk. Happened to bump into a guy I polled 2 months ago 1 week ago in another context. He had told me v firmly in the interview that if there were a GE tomorrow he would vote for one of the big two. But when I saw him again, outwith an interview context, he was equally firm that he would in fact vote for the third party.
And it wasn’t a change of heart. Just a change in candour.
Polls are an interesting sport of course. Precise. To at least one place of decimals. Yet with a whopping 6% band width. 3% either way. Making a lead from pollster X of 15% OVERLAP in a sense with one from pollster Y saying 10%. Yet one of the leads appears to be fully 50% more than the other! And most journos and politicians scarcely numerate to boot. Never mind the broad population.
But the combination of this apparent precision (with inaccuracy in the small print) with 24/7 mainstream media and the 24/7 clamour bloggers and tweeters, some with very grand ideas of their own importance, the danger is we get a rather meaningless mash of mush. For the poor woman or man in the street the chance for good old-fashioned sheepism is muchly reduced.
If so LOL say GOOD. The electorate have some stark choices to make. It would surely be in every one's best interest if every single elector ignored every opinion poll, ignored every gurning televised focus grouper, ignored every bogacious bar chart and speculative swingometer and squealing headline, made no attempt whatsoever to bet on the national winner, and instead voted in the best way available to them.
To return either a Conservative or a Labour government. In their own interests or in solidarity with those needing the most support from society. A little clue here. This is not those with net estates in the clear blue water zone between some £700,000 and £2 million. And it's not feral hedge fundies either. Or Mum-Ps with no main home and dynasties of unsuitable relations in top jobs.
2 comments:
You clearly must be worried by what will happen in about 100 days to spend so much time an effort on this opinion poll.
In 2005 the poll of marginal seats was very close to what happened in the election.
One of the opinion polls well worth watching
Still looks like it could be quite close.
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