Examining the PPP Likely Voter screen
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 27th at 01:00 PM |
By request, I’ve decided to take a look at just what kind of electorate the Public Policy Polling screening of Likely Voters seems to be predicting. To do this I will use recent PPP polls from two states: California, which went for Barack Obama heavily, and West Virginia, where Obama’s popularity has never been that hot.
Tags:
2010,
Barack Obama,
Barbara Boxer,
California,
Carly Fiorina,
CNN,
Exit Polls,
Joe Manchin,
John Raese,
Likely Voters,
Public Policy Polling,
Senate,
West Virginia
About Newsweek’s Generic Ballot
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 4th at 11:00 AM |
So Newsweek put out a new Generic Ballot. The magazine’s polling had drawn notice before in my House projection reports (this week’s edition coming later today), but this new one just seems completely out of line: Democrats +5 among Registered Voters. That filtering is expected to lean to the left after the 2008 anomaly, but this is ridiculous.
I have a rule about internal polling
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | October 1st at 04:00 PM |
Scientific polling, based on the laws of probability and the compounding of likelihoods, is a mathematical activity. It’s all about the numbers. Without the numbers no poll has meaning. That’s why I highlight key facts like Margins of Error. Your typical internal poll release is very low on numbers and instead is a one page memo. Those releases can be based on sound polling practices, | Read More »
On the USC/LA Times poll of California
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 27th at 01:30 PM |
This new poll of the California races by Greenberg Quinlan Rosner and American Viewpoint for USC and the LA Times has been discussed from one side of the Internet to the other, and back again. But I wouldn’t be doing my job if I let it go without chiming in, now would I? Of course not. So let’s dig in.
Tags:
2010,
American Viewpoint,
Barbara Boxer,
California,
Carly Fiorina,
Governor,
Greenberg Quinlan Rosner,
Jerry Brown,
Likely Voters,
Los Angeles Times,
Meg Whitman,
Senate,
USC
Robin Carnahan is in real trouble
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 9th at 01:30 PM |
It’s already bad enough for Democrat Robin Carnahan that she hasn’t led a poll this year, but since primaries Republican Roy Blunt’s lead has been growing. In the likely voter polls he now leads by 6, 7, and now 10 in the latest Rasmussen.
SurveyUSA: Paul well ahead in Kentucky
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | September 5th at 03:01 PM |
SurveyUSA is no fly-by-night operation in polling. They’ve been around a while, they have a reputation, and a great many newspapers seem use them to poll local House races. So we can’t dismiss their continuing series of polls which look very good for Republicans, including this new Kentucky Senate poll for the Louisville Courier-Journal with Republican Randal Paul seeming to overwhelm Democrat Jack Conway.
A tale of two polls: Colorado edition
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 31st at 04:00 PM |
It seems like most of the third party and independent spoilers this year are harming Democrats, but the Constitution Party’s Tom Tancredo is clearly hurting Republican Dan Maes in the Colorado Governor’s race, currently throwing the lead to Democrat John Hickenlooper. But two new polls on that race, from Magellan Strategies via Real Clear Politics and Rasmussen Reports are so different that I think we | Read More »
Tags:
2010,
Colorado,
Dan Maes,
Governor,
John Hickenlooper,
Likely Voters,
Magellan Strategies,
Rasmussen Reports,
Real Clear Politics,
Secret Sauce,
Tom Tancredo
Gallup: Generic ballot shows record Republican lead
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 30th at 05:30 PM |
I’ve had my ups and downs with Gallup (one might say the relationship is like the plot of the Gallup generic ballot itself!), but since they’ve been solidly running registered voter surveys again, the numbers have looked reasonable. But now they’re shocking us from the other direction by showing the Republicans having their largest ever lead in the generic ballot survey, showing a larger edge | Read More »
Swingometer Update
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 24th at 07:00 AM |
The Florida primaries are today, but I’m not posting on them today. That way I have time to address – by popular demand* – all the new generic ballot polls, and see where the Swingometer is landing lately. As always, I’m using the trusty Real Clear Politics archives to find the polls. So let’s go.
Tags:
2010,
Associated Press,
CNN,
Fox News,
Gallup,
Generic Ballot,
GfK,
House,
Likely Voters,
Opinion Research,
Public Policy Polling,
Rasmussen Reports,
Registered Voters,
Swingometer,
Time
Giannoulias leads, but Democrats deeply depressed
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 17th at 02:00 PM |
From Unlikely Voter: I theorized before that Pat Quinn would drag down Alexi Giannoulias in Illinois, with a rout for Governor having reverse coattails for Senate, and now Public Policy Polling seems to show the effects I predicted. A bad candidate for governor in a negative wave year is a terrible situation for a party to have, but that’s the Democrats in Illinois today.
Tags:
2010,
Alexi Giannoulias,
Barack Obama,
Illinois,
Likely Voters,
Mark Kirk,
Pat Quinn,
Public Policy Polling,
Secret Sauce,
Senate,
Swingometer
Why I favor Rubio to win, despite it all
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | August 16th at 12:00 PM |
Some may have questioned why, in my new Senate projection, I had Florida at a 55% chance to win for Republican Marco Rubio, when much of the polling has shown newly minted independent Charlie Crist with tiny leads. It’s because I saw this new poll from Mason Dixon which not only covered the primary the Democrats are holding, but the consequences of that primary on | Read More »
Tags:
2010,
Charlie Crist,
Florida,
Ipsos,
Jeff Greene,
Kendrick Meek,
Likely Voters,
Marco Rubio,
Mason Dixon Polling and Research,
Secret Sauce,
Senate,
St. Petersburg Times
What is going on in Kentucky?
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | July 6th at 01:30 PM |
With the help of the Real Clear Politics, here are the last few polls of the Kentucky Senate race. PPP: Randal Paul +1. RR: Paul +25. SUSA: Paul +6. RR: Paul +8, Paul +7. And now we have PPP: Tie. Why is PPP running so much further toward Jack Conway than the other two pollsters?
The Rasmussen Secret Sauce: Pennsylvania Governor Edition
By: Neil Stevens (Diary) | May 24th at 01:13 PM |
Are we tired of Pennsylvania yet? Of course not! Specifically we now check in on the Governor’s race. Rasmussen has released the first poll since the primary, but I will compare that with the last pre-primary Quinnipiac poll anyway. Tom Corbett and Dan Onorato were obvious likely nominees. I believe we have as much to learn about Rasmussen’s distinctive modeling as we do about the | Read More »
Tags:
2010,
Dan Onorato,
Governor,
Likely Voters,
Nate Silver,
Pennsylvania,
Quinnipiac University,
Rasmussen Reports,
Secret Sauce,
TEA party,
Tom Corbett