AP Poll: Setup for a Stolen Election?
October 27, 2008 04:06 AM EDT
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| AP Poll: Setup for a Stolen Election? |  |  |  |  |  |  |
| Written by Michael Collins | | 24 October 2008 | | As the Associated Press "tightens" the presidential race to a one-point margin, Michael Collins asks: Is the new AP "Poll" a Setup for another stolen election? October 24, 2008 - Washington, DC (Scoop Internet News) - The Associated press came out with a remarkable poll Thursday. It claimed that the presidential race had tightened from the consistent leads Obama has shown over the past weeks to become one of those "too close to call" national elections. Their poll, conducted by German polling firm GfK, showed 44% for Obama and 43% for McCain. How could this be? In the Real Clear Politics average of major national polls, Oct 24, Obama's average lead is 7.5%. The four national polls conducted on the same days as the AP poll show an average 9.2% Obama lead. The polls after the AP "tightening" effort shows an 8.7% Obama lead. Clearly the AP-GfK poll is an exception or outlier, as those are called. Yet the AP presents this as news, not opinion. What is AP Up To? AP acknowledges that its poll is different from the other national polls but claims it's not "alone." It isn't. There is exactly one other poll that agrees with AP out of 16 presented on the Real Clear Politics summary for Oct. 24. AP ignores the tentative nature of the poll and presents the story as "news." It begins drawing conclusions from the poll at the start of the article with "rumors" from unidentified sources; "The poll, which found Obama at 44 percent and McCain at 43 percent, supports what some Republicans and Democrats privately have said in recent days: that the race narrowed after the third debate as GOP-leaning voters drifted home to their party and McCain's "Joe the plumber" analogy struck a chord." AP, Oct. 23, 2008 Reviewing the internal details and questions of the poll analysis by GfK, there are no questions about Joe the Plumber. Since this is the opening claim, mentioned again as central to the shift AP is selling us, it's important to look at how the debate was viewed by the public. CNN and CBS both did national polls the evening of the debate. CNN reported that 58% of those watching the debate thought Obama won, with only 31% favoring McCain. CBS polled uncommitted voters who judged Obama the winner over McCain by 53% to 22%. This was the biggest margin for Obama for the series of three counters. What was going on with the AP sample of voters? AP's Flawed Poll The Associated Press is no stranger to polling. It is the lead sponsor for the national exit polls for Presidential and Congressional elections. Their recent effort in 2006 surveyed over 13,000 individuals and produced detailed demographic results on voters that actually contradict their current effort. The built in bias of the AP poll is obvious when one reviews the internals. 45% of the 800 person likely voter sample described themselves as "born again or evangelical" Christians. The remaining 55% said no (AP-GfK p. 24). AP should have known that it's 2006 exit poll showed that 36% of respondents were born again, a much lower percentage than included in their McCain friendly poll of yesterday. Also, AP should have known the 2006 exit poll the group had a 60% preference for Republican candidates over Democrats. The election magic for McCain was complete before the presidential preferences were even sampled. The over representation of Christians and the born agains in the sample guaranteed a preference for McCain. But there was more. A look at the poll shows that 1,101 registered voters were surveyed. The final poll consisted of 800 "likely voters" taken from that group. The registered voters divided up with 48% for Obama and 38% for McCain. The reduction of Obama support and increase for McCain indicates that McCain's voters are highly motivated to turnout while Obama's are more likely to stay home. This contradicts the actual evidence available showing major gains in newly registered voters for Obama and huge advantages in primary turnout for Democrats compared Republicans. It's small crowds for McCain and record breaking gatherings for Obama around the country, including 35,000 in Leesburg, Virginia on Thursday Oct. 23. In polling, the sample determines the outcome of a poll. If you bias the poll sample toward groups that are well known to support one party, then the poll will reflect that sample selection. In this case, AP, GfK did just that. They created a Republican friendly sample which displayed more motivation to vote because it started out Republican friendly. The AP-GfK "Giveaway" Within the details of the poll, there's a major clue that something is very wrong. The likely voter sample was asked questions that are directly related to attacks and negative campaigning. Voters are consistent in decrying what they perceive as unfair attacks. Note how they perceive each candidate's "attacks" during the campaign:  (AP-GfK p. 18)
AP wants us to believe that the same sample that made these responses also showed lower than average support for Obama and higher for McCain even. A clear majority describe McCain and Palin as "mostly unfair" in their attacks on Obama. An equally clear majority of the sample say that the Obama and Biden attacks on McCain are "mostly fair." Are They Preparing Us for a "Surprise?" On a recent Larry King show, the anchors for the major networks were asked for a prediction on the presidential election. Brian Williams of NBC practically came out of his seat when he encouraged viewers to get up and "run" from anyone who tells you that they know how this election will come out. The other anchors echoed these sentiments. This is the very worst type of news commentary. How could Williams know that a month or so ago? Why would the others just bob their heads? Are they preparing us for something "special?" The analysis of the AP, ABC, CBS, CNN, FOX, NBC "media consortium" final exit poll might provide a clue: Election 2004: The Urban Legend. The past is prologue. <hr>Michael Collins is a writer who focuses on clean elections and voting rights. He is the publisher of the web site ElectionFraudNews.com. His Scoop Independent News articles can be found here. |
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Comments: 36
Lie, cheat, and steal.
Just like last time when Bush was installed despite astronomical percentage chances against, based on historical accuracy of exit polling relative to vote count.
Exit polling has a historical margin of error of about 1/4% and is polling that consists of asking voters who they voted for as they leave the polling place. In the last election the variance in ten battleground states all "fell" in Bush's favor (in every one) with as much as 10% variance from exit polling numbers. And, the turnarounds in the number counts happened in the very last few hours.
I've been "hollaring fraud" for the last several years, and I don't want to do it again.
I don't think the overwhelming majority of Obama supporters or anyone who isn't part of the fraud wants to see the election process corrupted and manipulated as it has been. What is the value in a representative democracy if your vote doesn't count? One way or another it's tyranny. At that point party or political philosophy doesn't matter much.
And my "hollar" is in quotes. It's the red-state spellin'. You know, the way Ellie May used to hollar to Granny from the cement pond.
Here's my prediction: If Obama isn't ahead by at least 10 points in the best conducted polls, he won't win when the votes are counted.
In any, event, I do expect the race to be a lot closer than the polls now indicate.
Take the worry out of this election and vote for me. Here's the straight skinny:
How I'll run the government
Yeah, maybe, Lois, is your human nature is anti-social.
All the major problems we have right now can be traced back to the Democrats taking office 2 years ago. It was the bleeding heart Democrats that said we need to losen up the money so that just any old average Joe can buy a house. But just any old average Joe can't afford one and many can't take care of it if they get it. Now we are all suffering because they want us to bail out the rich dudes that buckled to their whims in the first place. The only thing that the Democrats are very good at is spin. They have a lot of articulate people that are able to pass the blame and make it sound right.
Robert, I think we can safely throw historical yada out in this election. As John pointed out, the New Hampshire primary is a bit of an ominous omen for my Barack.
And John, I am considering writing in your name. I like your platform! Hugs!
As to why this is, some of it could possibly be bias (use the poll as a tool to discourage McCain/Palin voters from coming out if they think there's no point to it) or it could just be sloppyness and people not following up because they see what they want to see.
At any rate, it's voting that actually matters. It's just my hope that since things have been as close as they've been back in times when more Disney characters were voting (who really knows how long that's been going on) that the ACORN voter fraud will have more people paying closer attention to what's going on.
And Suzi, the sub-prime loans go back a lot further than 2 years, so that talking point about the "bleeding heart Democrats" is nonsense. And a large part of our economic trouble is our trade deficit and diminished value of the dollar that resulted from the tremendous national debt that rose from 5.7 trillion when Bush took office to over 9 trillion when the Republican Congress left.
Happy Halloween. Hope you have a great weekend.