From: alternet.org : http://www.alternet.org/election04/20213/ October 19, 2004
TOO CLOSE TO CALL
WHY PRESIDENTIAL POLLS
CAN'T PREDICT THE WINNER
"Republican
presidential nominee George W. Bush holds a 49-to-43 percent edge over
Democratic rival Al Gore in the latest CNN/Time pol.... The poll of 2,060 adult
Americans ... is thus in essential agreement with a CNN/USA Today/Gallup
tracking poll also released Friday. That poll gives Bush a 52 percent
[to] 39 percent edge over Gore. More important, both polls show the same
snapshot of the current state of the presidential campaign: a solid advantage
for Bush. ABC News and The Washington Post both have daily tracking polls today
putting the race at 48 percent for Bush and 45 percent for Gore."
Eleven days
later Gore won the popular vote by more than 500,000 votes. Four years
ago, shortly before the election, these major polls were wrong.
The 2000 polls could not correctly predict the winner because they could not
accurately predict the effect of the substantial "get out the vote"
efforts, especially by labor unions and Democratic organizations in important
swing states. Bush's supposed "solid advantage" in the popular
vote did not actually exist. It was a
fabrication of the polls.
Fast forward to
September 18, 2004 when the New York Times reported that a Gallup poll
found Bush leading Kerry 52 to 44 percent among registered voters, and 55 to 42
percent among likely voters. A New York Times/CBS News poll
also had Bush over Kerry "51 percent to 42 percent among likely
voters."
Sound
familiar? Since the first presidential debate, some polls have showed
Kerry and Bush as even and suggested the election is too close to call. This is the only trustworthy prediction that
anyone can make.
Only in
"safe" states where leads are large can polls reliably predict the
winner. Yes, Kerry will win Illinois, New York and other "blue"
states, and Bush will win Texas, Indiana other "red" states.
But in this election, and especially in the crucial swing states, it is not the
few undecided voters but the many new and returning lapsed voters -- the
unknown voters -- who will make the difference.
In 2004,
Democrats are energized and engaged like never before. Several
independent get-out-the-vote campaigns -- especially ACT (Americans Coming
Together) and MoveOn.org -- have been working in the swing states to
increase the Kerry vote. Some individuals are even getting out voters on
their own. For example, Frank Phillips,
an indefatigable 90 year-old retired businessman from New Hyde Park, New York,
recently organized friends and neighbors to call voters in Florida. Now he is arranging calls to three thousand
more in Ohio.
Syndicated
columnist Mark Shields recently reported that in Ohio "one of the smartest
Republican professionals I know ... confided that he feared the GOP 'needs a
5-point lead in the polls heading into Election Day' to counter what he sees as
'the Democrats' intensity' and organizational commitment."
Because the margins are so small, unpredictable events like stormy weather on
election day could also effect the outcome. Nader's campaign remains a wild
card; a few thousand or even a few hundred votes that Nader takes from Kerry
could tip the electoral votes of one or more swing states to Bush -- as Nader's
newfound Republican backers understand.
In this
election, the only certainty is that turnout on November 2 will matter
enormously.
And even after
the election, if a poll seems to have predicted the winner, remember that
it had a 50 percent chance of being right. Which makes even more
impressive the mistaken predictions based on the polls four years ago. Coin
tosses would have done better than they did.
-----------------
Harry G. Levine is a professor of sociology at
Queens College, City University of New York. Craig Reinarman is a professor of
sociology at the University of California, Santa Cruz.