Failure Analysis: how could so many respected polling agencies gotten Trump's election wrong?
One explanation is, polled citizens were simply too ashamed to confess their preference for Trump, and so replied inaccurately to poll questions.
Perhaps it was that.
Perhaps a more important question:
should public opinion polling on presidential candidate races be restricted, either by self-imposed suspension by the polling agencies themselves, or as regulated by such agencies as the FCC?
Would we be better off if election day arrived; and the voters had no poll-driven expectation of the winner? Might that help promote a more accurate reflection of the mood of the country in the election outcome? Meaning, if right or wrong public opinion polls were predicting a Trump landslide for weeks before the election, would Hillary have won?
And if so, would that have been better.
One explanation is, polled citizens were simply too ashamed to confess their preference for Trump, and so replied inaccurately to poll questions.
Perhaps it was that.
Perhaps a more important question:
should public opinion polling on presidential candidate races be restricted, either by self-imposed suspension by the polling agencies themselves, or as regulated by such agencies as the FCC?
Would we be better off if election day arrived; and the voters had no poll-driven expectation of the winner? Might that help promote a more accurate reflection of the mood of the country in the election outcome? Meaning, if right or wrong public opinion polls were predicting a Trump landslide for weeks before the election, would Hillary have won?
And if so, would that have been better.