The
latest polling says, “if the election were held today, President
Obama would lose to at least two of the Republican hopefuls.”
Oh
yeah? I’m a bit fatigued by fiction and over-speculation,
yet what I know is that if you say something enough times,
people will believe it.
This
oft repeated phrase heads the news cycle every three to
four weeks. We seem to instinctively pay it some attention.
Our ears perk up, and depending on the reporting numbers
(yes, we understand numbers), our countenance changes accordingly.
Whether it be the national debt, Medicare, war, God or election
politics, polls dictate our beliefs. Isn’t it a shame that
I pegged you?
There
are two points that immediately came to my mind when I heard
that statement: “if the election were held today, President
Obama would lose to at least two of the Republican hopefuls.”
First, the election isn’t being held today;
therefore, the poll is simply a conversation-starter and
money-maker. I don’t know how much Quinnipiac or Gallup
gets paid to compile these numbers, but when we get down
to brass tacks, data based upon fictional results are worthless.
I’d like to say, a snapshot of the electorate can be garnered
from polling a sample of the population, but I strongly
disagree with that premise.
Let’s
use the “Obama would lose…” scenario. I’m a low-income voter
from a city and district that overwhelmingly voted for Obama
in 2008. My not-a-state, the District
of Columbia, has more citizens than the state of Wyoming.
I’m fairly active in the political realm. I have never been
called by Quinnipiac or Gallup. None of my friends or relatives
has either. I’m not mad about it. Some of my friends and
relatives are among the ranks of government workers, union
members, the unemployed, clergy and the business community.
Why wouldn’t their view matter in a national discussion?
I am dismayed that people take real stock in non-representative
polls.
What
we know about political polls is that in election politics,
military moves garner generous gains in the polls. Although
Obama may be vilified by Republicans, conservatives, or
racist Republican conservatives, he knows how to play politics.
He may not be white (despite having a white mother), but
he understands how whites play the game. Aggressive military
action wins elections for incumbents (think Reagan and Bush
43). The
right-wing attacks on Obama’s weakness regarding national
security issues vaporized with the Somali pirate take back
in April 2009 and again in February 2011, the maintenance
of Guantanamo, and the now legendary hunt and killing
of Osama bin Laden.
Will
Obama’s poll numbers shift favorably in the wake of the
bin Laden killing and even billionaire Donald Trump’s “carnival
barker Barack certificate” fiasco, given that his stumping
on more relevant issues such as budget cuts (on poor people)
and ridiculous gas prices have not? Are you convinced by
polls that say the president is more unpopular today, even
though he’s broken his own back bending over backwards to
compromise with vindictive Republicans? At the time of publication,
just a few days after the killing of Osama bin Laden, the
news reports an 11% increase in Obama’s poll ratings, up
from his all-time low of a 34% approval rating.
What
the Washington Post, Quinnipiac, CNN, Gallup,
Real Clear Politics, and other media outlets do is take
poll releases from various polling groups in a certain time
range, and aggregate them to find a sort of consensus. How
can that be good?
If
your intention is to accurately reflect the opinion of the
general public, then how can you do that without taking
the pulse of the “nooks & crannies” of society? To ask
high-income people how they feel about cutting Medicare
- when they’ll never need it - is like asking poor people
how they enjoyed their last glass of 1941 Inglenook Reserve
fine wine. Their answer would be an uninformed one, thus
making the poll worthless.
I
like the way blogger, D.J. Drummond put it: “It’s a bit
like saying that if you take everyone’s favorite version
of spaghetti and mix them all together, you will get a really
great-tasting batch of spaghetti. The odds are you will
get a mess which won’t be worth the effort, and that’s what
happens when you mix poll results. Polls, it should be noted,
are the product of the groups and agencies which create
them, and reflect a specific methodology which is usually
similar to that used by other polling groups but not exactly.
That difference is why the two results cannot be mixed with
confidence, and the more polls that are mixed, the less
reliable would be the resulting report.”
So
I ask, “Who paid for the poll that guides your countenance?”
You ought to ask that too. Whose interest is fulfilled by
the results of the poll in front of you? I saw two polls
asking virtually the same question about an impending election;
one conducted by The Huffington Post and the other
by The Heritage Foundation. Guess the outcome. If you guessed
‘two totally different sets of poll data,’ you’re right.
So who’s lying? No one. It depends upon who you ask.
My
advice is do not be led by people who care nothing about
you - yet seek to extract everything from you.
They’ll lead you off the edge of the cliff every time. It’s
important to be informed, but polling is more often than
not, misleading - with a targeted agenda.
I
can’t wait to see your poll. If you live in a black
community, ask people in and around it, “has America eradicated racism?”
Your polling numbers will likely show your respondent’s
pessimism. Conversely, if you were to ask that same question
to high-income whites, the numbers of “no opinion” respondents
would likely be higher, and you’d likely receive
more responses denoting an optimistic outlook, that is,
America is actively and honestly making
strides in achieving racial equality.
Polls
are subjective data tools than can be used against you.
Remember that precaution the next time you hear “a newly
released poll found that…” Chances are, no one ever asked
you!
BlackCommentator.com
Columnist, Perry
Redd, is the former Executive Director of
the workers rights advocacy, Sincere Seven, and author of
the on-line commentary, “The
Other Side of the Tracks.” He is the host of the internet-based
talk radio show, Socially Speaking in
Washington,
DC.
Click
here to contact Mr.
Redd.
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