CALIFORNIA FOCUS
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 25, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
FOR RELEASE: FRIDAY, MAY 25, 2018, OR THEREAFTER
BY THOMAS D. ELIAS
“WHY THE
POLLS ARE WILDLY VARIABLE THIS SPRING”
Modern
life may have caught up with political polling. Just as they have shaken up
industries and activities from newspapers to taxis, from telephones to
shopping, today’s technologies are making old reliable survey research
techniques and tactics obsolete or inaccurate.
That’s
one big reason California has wild variability this spring in political polls
leading into next month’s primary elections for governor and the U.S. Senate,
especially for governor.
In the
space of two days in late April, the Survey USA polling firm found Lt. Gov.
Gavin Newsom leading with 21 percent support from likely voters to 18 percent
for former Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and 15 percent for mostly
self-funded San Diego County businessman John Cox. Newsom and Villaraigosa are
Democrats; Cox a Republican. Running fourth was Orange County Republican
Assemblyman Travis Allen with 10 percent, just one point ahead of Democratic
state Treasurer John Chiang. The top two vote-getters in the June 5 count will
make the November runoff election.
But
just one day later came very different results from the UC Berkeley Institute
of Governmental Studies poll, run by Mark DiCamillo, former head of the
longtime and usually reliable California Field Poll, which no longer conducts
surveys on public affairs.
That
gauge, like every other of the last 18 months, showed Newsom ahead, but with 30
percent support, almost 50 percent more than reported the previous day. The
really big difference came in the next three slots, which were completely
scrambled from every previous poll. Cox was now second, with 18 percent, while
Allen vaulted past Villaraigosa to a 16 percent showing and the ex-Los Angeles
mayor plummeted to 9 percent, with others far behind.
About
two weeks earlier, still another poll from the Public Policy Institute of
California put Newsom ahead and Cox and Villaraigosa in a virtual dead heat for
second, with Allen well behind.
Never
in a half century of political polling has California seen such variance.
Most
likely, it’s because of greatly varied techniques used by the three most
significant outfits working here. Survey USA, whose national results in 2016
were as close as anyone’s to the actual outcome, uses many “robot” phone calls,
trying to reach cell phone users who now dominate telephonic communications.
Fewer than half of Californians now have land lines.
The
PPIC uses a lot of live callers, while the Berkeley IGS poll employs mostly
email.
“Let’s
wait until after the election to see which is best,” says DiCamillo, perhaps a
little irritated that some academics quickly called his results “peculiar” and
“an outlier.”
DiCamillo
says it’s not merely technology, but also telephone users’ preferences that
have upset the pollsters’ apple carts. “A declining share of voters are willing
to participate when called randomly,” he said. “Forty years ago, about
two-thirds of people called would take part. Now cooperation rates are below 10
percent. A lot of people simply screen our calls out.”
This
forces pollsters to experiment while seeking a method that matches the old
reliability once generated by his former California Poll, founded by the late
Mervin Field, DeCamillo said.
“Polling
is at a crossroads,” DiCamillo concludes. “That’s why we’re trying the
internet. It gives us a lot of advantages.”
For one thing, he said, it allows for listing all candidates, not merely those with the most money or prior prominence. That’s probably why his Berkeley IGS survey had little-known Republican James Baldwin in a statistical second-place tie with the far better-known Democratic state Sen. Kevin de Leon, both far behind incumbent Democratic Sen. Dianne Feinstein in the primary run for the U.S. Senate. No other poll has even listed Baldwin, whose fund-raising is so slim he hasn’t needed to file reports with the Federal Elections Commission.
“It’s
very different from doing it by phone,” DeCamillo said, describing his panel of
likely voters as chosen both for willingness to participate and their past
primary election voting history. They also must list an email address on their
voter registration forms, something many longtime, regular voters never did.
So it’s
a brave new world for the pollsters, and as DiCamillo said, the proof will be
in the pudding, when real votes are counted on Election Night.
-30-
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
Elias is author of the current book “The Burzynski Breakthrough: The Most Promising Cancer Treatment and the Government's Campaign to Squelch It,” now available in an updated third edition. His email address is tdelias@aol.com
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