By W. Joseph Campbell
More than six months after the astonishing polling embarrassment in the 2020 U.S. elections, survey experts examining what went wrong are uncertain about what led to the sharpest discrepancy between the polls and popular vote outcome since Ronald Reagan defeated Jimmy Carter in a near-landslide in 1980.
Lingering questions about the misfire in 2020, in which voter support for then-President Donald Trump was understated in final pre-election polls, suggest that troubles in accurately surveying presidential elections could be deeper and more profound than previously recognized. If the source of the polling miscall isn’t clear, then addressing and correcting it obviously becomes quite challenging.
Moreover, as I discussed in my 2020 book “Lost in a Gallup,” polling failures in presidential elections since 1936 rarely have been repetitive. Just as no two elections are alike, no two polling failures are quite the same.
Over the years, pollsters have anticipated tight presidential elections when landslides have occurred. They have signaled the wrong winner in closer elections. The estimates of venerable pollsters have been singularly in error. Wayward exit polls have thrown Election Day into confusion by identifying the losing candidate as the likely winner. Off-target state polls have confounded expected national outcomes, which essentially was the story in 2016.
Support that wasn’t there
In 2020, overall, election polls pointed to Democrat Joe Biden’s winning the presidency. But the polls overstated support for Biden and underestimated backing for Trump no matter how close to the election the poll was conducted and regardless of the methods pollsters chose. Surveys in races for U.S. senator and governor were beset by similar shortcomings.
Those were among the key findings described recently at the annual conference of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, which was convened online. The organization had recruited a task force of 19 experts in survey research who examined the 2020 election polls in detail and reported being unable, so far, to pinpoint specific causes of polling errors.
Their findings did make clear, however, that the 2020 miscall was the most significant in 40 years.
Polls in the presidential race in 2020 collectively overstated Biden’s lead by 3.9 percentage points, the task force chair, Joshua Clinton of Vanderbilt University, said in a presentation at the conference.
This marked the fourth presidential election in the past five in which the national polls, at least to some extent, overstated support for Democratic candidates.
Masking dramatic miscalls
Averaging the polling errors, as the task force did in conducting its analysis, is broadly revealing about the extent of those errors. But it has the effect of masking several dramatic miscalls in late-campaign polls conducted in 2020 by, or for, leading news organizations. The final CNN poll had Biden ahead by 12 points. Surveys for The Wall Street Journal-NBC News and by the Economist-YouGov had Biden winning by 10 percentage points as the campaign wound down. A few polls, such as Emerson College’s survey, came close in estimating the outcome.
Biden won the popular vote by 4.5 percentage points.
Clinton, the Vanderbilt professor, said the task force eliminated several prospective causes of polling error in 2020, including those that likely distorted survey results in key states in 2016 when Trump unexpectedly won an Electoral College victory. Those factors included undecided voters swinging to Trump late in the campaign and a failure by some pollsters to adjust survey results to account for varying levels of education.
White voters without college degrees were understood to have voted heavily for Trump in 2016, but those voters were underrepresented in some polls in key states such as Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where Trump won narrowly and surprisingly.
A source of the miscalls in 2020, Clinton said, may have been that Republicans were less inclined than Democrats to agree to be interviewed by pollsters.
If that’s so, it’s not entirely clear why that happened. And that prospect troubles pollsters and survey research experts.
Courtney Kennedy, director of survey research at Pew Research Center, said while moderating a panel discussion at the conference that “what keeps me from getting a good night’s sleep these days is the prospect … Republicans, or maybe certain types of Republicans, seem like they’re less inclined to participate in polls these days than Democrats.”
This may be a tough problem for pollsters to overcome, she said, adding, “It would be a real challenge” to calibrate poll-taking to capture such nuanced distinctions.
Likewise, it is unclear whether Trump’s sharp criticism of pre-election polls in 2020 dissuaded his supporters from participating in surveys.
“So it’s possible that these may be short-term phenomena that will abate when Trump is not on the ballot,” Daniel Merkle, president of the American Association for Public Opinion Research, said in a speech recorded for conference-goers.
“On the other hand, it could be a broader issue of conservatives becoming less likely to respond to polls in general because of a decline in social trust, or for some other reasons. It will take further evaluation to understand this nonresponse issue and to adjust for it. This may not be an easy task,” Merkle said.
Overblown characterizations
In the immediate aftermath of the 2020 election, several media critics asserted that polling seemed “irrevocably broken” and faced “serious existential questions.”
Such alarming characterizations appear overblown; polls are not going to melt away. After all, election polling represents a slice of a multibillion-dollar industry that includes consumer and product surveys of all types.
And if election polling survived the debacle of 1948 – when President Harry S. Truman defied predictions of pollsters and pundits to win reelection – then it surely will live on after the embarrassment of 2020.
W. Joseph Campbell is Professor of Communication Studies, American University School of Communication. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.
Joe says
There was no polling error. The average of the National Polls were dead on for Biden support and only 2.9% off for Trump support. so I would say they were accurate. Certainly within the margin of error.
Approximately 200 National polls were conducted in a nine month period before the election and only one of those polls out of 200 had Trump winning. It was a Rasmussen poll conducted on 9/15 that had Trump winning by 1 point with 47% of the vote. The average on all the National Polls was Biden with 51.2% to Trump with 44.0%. The final election results were Biden with 51.4% to Trump with 46.9%.
https://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2020/president/us/general_election_trump_vs_biden-6247.html?fbclid=IwAR3lOGf5ddoSdTDuklk9E-xbdZ78X32BtZ8WvY14GsCncvJnjQONMDLl7po#polls
tulip says
The error was the it never occurred to the “trump people” that millions of people would get fed up with Trump’s antics and lack of leadership and voted for Pres. Biden. And whether a person agrees or disagrees with President Biden, he is actually being a real president and trying to take care of business rather then spend the next 4 years on tv everyday lying and slamming people and calling our soldiers suckers and losers, dividing this country into hate groups as our ex-president did and still is doing.
Jimbo99 says
Polling for HRC vs Trump was ridiculously wrong. Who knows if 2016 had waited an additional 4 days for counts/recounts whether HRC would’ve tilted to a Biden vs Trump-like EV election result ? Going forward, Is waiting 4 days to announce results is going to be the new normal for a National election ? Biden didn’t start to pull ahead & lead until Friday 11/6 for EV counts to swing. I mean it wasn’t until Friday 11/6 & Saturday 11/7 that Biden was still losing & Trump had the EV’s to be at 270+. The EV count still was the 306-232 margin that 2016 was, just the D’s pulled out the larger margin of win in battleground states this time, where it was pretty close for popular vote.
Blue Blood says
Oh make no doubt about it, Republicans are embarrassed of who they’ve allowed to represent them lately, so they hide it. Party over country. Keep the power at any and all costs. They’ll see it all burned down before they allow a lib to own them. That’s fascism in a nutshell. Because, well, Jesus I suppose. ¯\_(ツ)_/¯
JimB says
No, I’m not embarrassed about a president who was getting this country back on it’s feet and making proud Americans feel proud about their country that was prospering before a fool that hasn’t done anything in almost 50 yrs of living off taxpayers took office. A fool that has brought this country’s standings down to a third world country. A fool that is dishonest and deceitful and brought a son up in the same way. I AM embarrassed that there are so many people fooled by a stuttering old man that can’t complete a simple sentence without losing his chain of thought. Fooled by a man that is clearly not mentally capable of running a country or representing the people he has sworn to serve. That is the embarrassment.
Steve says
Being fooled by a Con over and over is more Credible though. Thank Ben Bernanke and Hank Paulsen along with The Bush Administration and Obama’s for the Tsunami of QE over near twenty Years that The orange dimwit Inherited.He lost more Jobs and the Election since the Depression due to his lack of C19 get over it buttercup it’s only 7 more Years. Build back Better
Mike Cocchiola says
Do not believe in any political poll. Not one… ever!
TR says
Yea right like you can believe that. Hahahaha
E, ROBOT says
I believe the syndrome is called whistling in the dark.
Times Up says
This election / voting thing is a BIG ILLUSION. It does NOT matter who anyone votes for. The “Rulers of the Darkness” decide what political puppets are put in the spot light. Its all a RUSE and the American people have been scammed again. They will continue to be scammed until the United States of America is NO LONGER a FREE COUNTRY.
The New World Order is taking shape as we bitch and complain about everything. We the People have been HAD. Live out your sorry ass life and do what you can get away with because FREEDOM will soon be a fading memory of history !
Steve says
That’s C19 Response. Oh and Jan.6 He did a wonderful Job there too.Great Patriots LMAO