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Public Opinion and Polling

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Title: Public Opinion and Polling


1
Public Opinion and Polling
  • Unit 3
  • AP Government

2
Public Opinion
  • Public Opinion
  • The opinions held by private persons which
    government feels it prudent to heed

3
Who are the Public in Public Opinion Polls??
  • 1. The Elite
  • Those with disproportionate amount of political
    resources.
  • They raise issues and help set national agenda.
  • They influence the resolution of issues.
  • 2. The Attentives
  • Those with an active interest in government and
    politics
  • 3. The Masses
  • Those with little interest in government and
    politics.

4
Understanding Public Opinion
  • Most of the American public shows little
    awareness and interest in politics.
  • Surveys show substantial lack of political
    knowledge on part of public
  • Identifying political figures
  • Identifying key issues  

5
Important Questions to Ponder
  • Who is in charge of creating policy?
  • How does Public Opinion Become Policy?
  • Are there politics involved?
  • How is reliable information gathered?
  • To whom should the government listen to?

6
How is Public Opinion Measured?
  • By elections
  • By Polls

7
How is Public Opinion Measured?
  • By elections
  • Initiatives (allow citizens to propose
    legislation and submit it to popular vote.)
  • Referendums (allows legislatures to submit
    proposed legislation for popular approval.)
  • Party positions on issues
  • By Polls
  • By straw polls
  • Unscientific surveys used to gauge public
    opinions
  • By scientific polls
  • Uses representative sampling methods 

8
Problems with these Methods
  • Elections
  • Not accurate because only voters participate
  • More in Unit 4!
  • Polling
  • By straw polls
  • No sampling makes them NOT accurate
  • By scientific polls
  • Most are accurate but will have margin of error
    which can mislead in close races 

9
Four Uses of Scientific Polls
  • Inform the public.
  • Inform candidates.
  • Inform office-holders.
  • Make election night predictions.

10
1st Public Opinion Poll
  • The first public opinion research goes back to
    July 24, 1824 (For Presidential Election)
  • The Harrisburg Pennsylvanian issued a report of a
    straw vote done at Wilmington, Del., "without
    discrimination of parties."
  • Andrew Jackson received 335 votes
  • John Quincy Adams, 169 votes
  • Henry Clay, 19 votes
  • William H. Crawford, 9 votes
  • SoWho won in November??

11
The Gallup Poll
  • Dr. George Gallup predicted the outcome of the
    1936 presidential election as a victory of
    Roosevelt over Landon with an error of 6.8
    percent.
  • His method was known as quota" sampling
  • Thereafter Gallup gained fame and his scientific
    method became prevalent in polling.

12
The Gallup Poll
  • Gallup made an error in predicting the 1948
    presidential election
  • The prediction that Thomas Dewey would defeat
    Harry Truman by anywhere from five to fifteen
    percentage points in 1948.
  • When Truman actually won by more than four
    percentage points, Gallup and polling was under
    attack.

13
New Polling Methods
  • In the 1956 election, Gallup abandoned "quota"
    sampling, and switched to a new method using
    random samplings
  • Random or probability sampling occurs when
    everyone in population being surveyed has an
    equal chance to be sampled
  • Much more accurate

14
How is a Scientific Poll Created?
  • Define the universe (the population to be
    measured)
  • National polls typically require 1000-2000
    respondents.
  • Sampling error The margin of error is expressed
    in /- terms.
  • Can reduce sampling error by adding more
    respondents
  • In other wordsTake random samples WHERE everyone
    has an equal chance of being included
  • Example Home Room v AP Government classes

15
Different Types of Scientific Polls
  • Telephone
  • Random calls
  • In-Person
  • Door-to-door, surveys in malls, shopping centers,
    movie theatres, and man on the street
    questionnaires
  • Exit Polls
  • Taken after elections when voters exit the
    polling place
  • Tracking Polls
  • Shows results of an issue over time

16
Problems of Polling
  • Telephone
  • Does not include cell phones
  • In-Person
  • Who stops in the Mall or opens doors these
    days???
  • Exit Polls
  • Who stops to talk to pollsters after elections?
  • 2004 election
  • Tracking
  • Taken out of context they make no more sense than
    a single frame from a movie.

17
Abuses of Polls
  • Horse race mentality emphasized during
    campaigns at expense of issues.
  • No real storyjust what the polls say
  • In a horse race world, horse race polls can tell
    you whos ahead but not why.
  • Example The strategies range from Rep. Richard
    A. Gephardts one-state last stand in Iowa to
    Sen. Joseph I. Liebermans rapid-fire attacks on
    Dean to retired Army Gen. Wesley K. Clarks
    national campaign on electability. All of them
    depend on Dean stumbling during the Jan. 19 Iowa
    caucuses and the New Hampshire primary the
    following week.
  • This use of polls panders to candidates and
    office-holders.

18
Push Poll Questions
  • Questions that are deliberately phrased to give
    information to public
  • Usually negative
  • Would you be more or less likely to support Doug
    Goehring if you knew he was against ethanol and
    didn't support farmers?
  • Would you be more or less likely to support Doug
    Goehring if you knew he was head of Nodak Mutual
    when it was under state investigation and that
    the state had to take it over because of his
    leadership?

19
The Most Famous Push Poll Question
  • Voters in South Carolina reportedly were asked
    before the 2000 Republican primary
  • "Would you be more likely or less likely to vote
    for John McCain for president if you knew he had
    fathered an illegitimate black child?
  • The allegation had no substance, but planted the
    idea of undisclosed allegations in the minds of
    thousands of primary voters.
  • McCain and his wife had in fact adopted a
    Bangladeshi girl.)

20
The Newest Push Poll Tactic-The Robo-Call
  • The Obama campaign has released a recording (mp3)
    it says came from a Nevadan's answering machine
    of an anonymous robocall that criticizes Obama
    for taking money from special interests while
    repeating, four times, his rarely used middle
    name "Hussein."
  • "I'm calling with some important information
    about Barack Hussein Obama," the call begins,
    before saying that  "Barack Hussein Obama says he
    doesn't take money from Washington lobbyists or
    special interest groups but the record is clear
    that he does."
  • After mentioning his full name once more, the
    call concludes
  • "You just can't take a chance on Barack Hussein
    Obama.

http//www.politico.com/blogs/bensmith/0108/Roboca
ll_trashes_Barack_Hussein_Obama.html
21
New Rule Prohibiting Unwanted "Robocalls" Takes
Effect on September 1, 2009
  • The Federal Trade Commission will now prohibit
    prerecorded commercial telemarketing calls to
    consumers unless the telemarketer has obtained
    permission in writing from consumers who want to
    receive such calls.
  • Calls not covered by the TSR include
  • Those from politicians, banks, telephone
    carriers, and most charitable organizations
  • The new prohibition on prerecorded messages does
    not apply to certain healthcare messages.
  • The new rule prohibits telemarketing robocalls to
    consumers whether or not they previously have
    done business with the seller.

22
Creating an Accurate Poll
  • You must have
  • Carefully Worded Questions
  • No bias and clearly differentiated alternatives
  • A poll that actually seeks the truth
  • Not Advocacy and Push Polls which try to
    influence the outcome
  • Look for reliable pollsters- not party polls
  • Remember
  • Polls are just a snapshot and may be wrong!!!
  • Example- 2004 Exit Polls and Election of 1948

23
Optional Public Opinion Project
  • You will create a political survey alone or with
    a small group. (Can be for SEG 3 or SEG 4)
  • One Person- Create a survey of 3 questions about
    same topic
  • Small Group (2-5 people) - Create a survey of 10
    questions about 2-5 topics
  • Please be specific- yes/no questions are easiest!
  • Example
  • Do you believe gay marriage should be legal in
    the United States?
  • Full Details on my Blog
  • http//waltonhigh.typepad.com/ms_boyd/
  • Please see me for question approval.

24
Public Opinion
  • Read Chapter 11!
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