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Polls, Politics and Public Relations. The Good, the Bad and the Ugly* *With apologies to Clint Eastwood. Presenter:. Paul N. Lee, Ph.D.: Associate professor of communication Program Director of Communication Program Maryville University of Saint Louis. Quotable:.
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Polls, Politicsand Public Relations The Good, the Bad and the Ugly* *With apologies to Clint Eastwood
Presenter: • Paul N. Lee, Ph.D.: • Associate professor of communication • Program Director of Communication Program • Maryville University of Saint Louis
Quotable: • Related to “public opinion”: • “Public opinion is the best judge of who’s right and wrong.” – Chinese proverb
Quotable: • Related to “public opinion”: • “Public opinion is a weak tyrant compared with our own private opinion. What a man thinks of himself, that it is which determines, or rather dictates, his fate.” – Henry David Thoreau
Quotable: • Related to “public opinion”: • “American public opinion is like an ocean – it cannot be stirred by a teaspoon.” – Hubert H. Humphrey
Quotable: • Related to “polling”: • “Polling is merely an instrument for gauging public opinion. When a president or other leader pays attention to poll results, he is, in effect, paying attention to the views of the public. Any other interpretation is nonsense.” – George Horace Gallup
Quotable: • Related to “polling”: • “There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies, and statistics.” – Benjamin Disraeli Quoted by Mark Twain in his autobiography
Quotable: • Related to “politics”: • “Politics is the art of the possible.” – Otto Von Bismarck
Quotable: • Related to “politics”: • “If politics is the art of the possible, research is surely the art of the soluble. Both are immensely practical minded.” – Peter B. Medawar
Quotable: • Related to “politics”: • “Politics is not the art of the possible. It consists in choosing between the disastrous and the unpalatable.” – John Kenneth Galbraith
Quotable: • Related to “public relations”: • “I work hard in social work, public relations, and raising the Grimaldi heirs.” – Princess Grace
Literary Digest poll: • History of the poll: • Literary Digest began summarizing contemporary opinion in 1890. • Literary Digest correctly predicted the election of Harding in 1920, Coolidge in 1924, Hoover in 1928, and Franklin Roosevelt in 1932 (less than .75 percent error).
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • History of the poll: • Literary Digest’s sample was selected from telephone books, automobile registration records, voter registration records, and subscribers. • In 1936, Literary Digest sent out 10 million “ballots” via postcards. • In 1936, 2.3 million “ballots” were returned.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • History of the poll: • On August 22, Literary Digest announced that the poll had been started. • Poll results started appearing in the September 5 issue of the weekly Literary Digest and continued to October 31, 1936.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • What the “ballots” said: • The Literary Digest poll showed 1,293,669 “votes” for Kansas Gov. Alfred M. (Alf) Landon compared to 972,897 for incumbent FDR. • It predicted that Landon would win with 57 percent. • Itpredicted that Landon would win 370 electoral votes.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • What the voters said: • The voters re-elected FDR with 61 percent of the vote. • FDR also won an electoral landslide with 523 electoral votes compared to 8 for Landon. • Roosevelt carried every state except Maine and Vermont.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • What the Literary Digest said: • Hundreds of “second-guessers” told the magazine what went wrong. • The magazine said the “have-nots” did not re-elect Roosevelt. • The cities selected for the poll were fine; the respondents failed to respond.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • What the Literary Digest said: • The magazine said the sample has always had too many “Hoover voters.” • The editors relied on the statisticians. • The editors trusted the sample in 1932, so why not trust it in 1936.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • What the Literary Digest said: • The editors said the sample was not too large. • As to the future of the poll, the editors said, “We’ll cross that bridge when we come to it.”
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • The fate of Literary Digest: • Subscriptions declined rapidly. • The magazine was in decline prior to the poll, losing circulation to the new magazines of the day. • The magazine was sold to Time in 1937. • Literary Digest died in 1938.
Literary Digest 1936 poll: • The Gallup Poll: • George Gallup started a weekly column, “America Speaks,” in 1935. • His sample totaled only 50,000 people. • He predicted FDR would win in 1936 with 54 percent of the popular vote and 315 electoral votes. • Gallup became “America’s oracle.”
Why is this man smiling? He was re-elected president!
1948 polling debacle: • The major candidates: • Incumbent President Harry S. Truman (Democrat) • N.Y. Gov. Thomas E. Dewey (Republican) • S.C. Gov. Strom Thurmond (States’ Rights Democrat/“Dixiecrat”) • Former Vice President Henry A. Wallace (Progressive)
1948 polling debacle: • Harry S. Truman: • Truman assumed the presidency upon the death of FDR in April 1945. • While he related to ordinary citizens, he scored low in the three major polls: Gallup, Roper, and Crossley. • Based on the polls, few radio journalists and newspaper reporters and editors felt he had a chance, and that entered into their reporting.
1948 polling debacle: • Thomas E. Dewey: • Dewey had run against FDR in 1944, creating FDR’s lowest election margin (54 percent). • Sensing an easy victory in 1948, the Republicans nominated Dewey again. • While Truman was personable and feisty, Dewey appeared stuffy; Dewey made mistakes.
1948 polling debacle: • Strom Thurmond: • Opposing the Democrats position on civil rights, Thurmond bolted from the Democratic Party. • He ran on the States’ Rights Democratic Party (“Dixiecrats”). • He divided the once solid South on which the Democratic Party had depended on in previous elections.
1948 polling debacle: • Henry A. Wallace: • Wallace served in as Secretary of Agriculture in FDR’s cabinet from 1933 to 1940. • He served as vice president during FDR’s third term (1941-1945.) • He failed to win re-nomination in 1944, being replaced by Truman. • He served as Truman’s Secretary of Commerce from 1945 to 1946.
1948 polling debacle: • The Gallup Poll: • On the eve of the election, Gallup predicted Dewey would defeat Truman 50 percent to 45 percent. • Gallup had been using quota sampling, a non-random selection methodology. • “America’s oracle” was discredited, as was polling in general.
1948 polling debacle: • The Gallup Poll: • Gallup’s final polling dated to mid-October. • His poll missed the late surge to Truman.
1948 polling debacle: • The Roper Poll: • So sure of Dewey’s victory, Roper stopped sampling in August and predicted Truman’s defeat in September. • In his September 9 column, Roper predicted Dewey would get 44 percent of the vote to Truman’s 31 percent.
1948 polling debacle: • The Crossley Poll: • Crossley’s final forecast was derived from a combination of state surveys. • The state surveys dated to mid-August, mid-September, and mid-October.
1948 polling debacle: • What went wrong: • Gallup, Roper, and Crossley stopped polling too early. • Some of the polls dated to mid-October or before. • The pollsters used quota sampling, which doesn’t use random selection of the sample.
1948 polling debacle: • What the voters said: • Truman was elected president in his own right with just under 50 percent of the vote. • Dewey received 45 percent of the vote. • Thurmond and Wallace each received less than 2.5 percent of the vote.
1948 polling debacle: • The close vote: • Truman received 303 electoral votes, compared to 189 for Dewey and 39 for Thurmond. • Truman narrowly carried Ohio, California, and Illinois. • Truman lost four large industrial states: New York, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, and Michigan.
1948 polling debacle: • “Dewey Defeats Truman”: • The infamous headline appeared in the Chicago (Daily) Tribune. • The Tribune’s publisher, Colonel Robert McCormick, didn’t much care for Dewey, but he hated Truman. • The Tribune published 11 editions of the newspaper with seven different headlines.
1948 polling debacle: • The Tribune’s headlines: • “Governor Dewey Claims Victory” • “Dewey Defeats Truman” • “GOP Wins White House” • “Early Dewey Lead Narrows” • “Dewey Holds Narrow Lead” • “Dewey Ahead! Race Close” • “It’s Truman by 150,000”
1948 polling debacle: • The Tribune’s headache: • Like most major dailies, the Tribune printed in three formats: city editions, 40-mile circulation editions, and mail editions. • Early editions contained the infamous headline. • The newspaper staff tried to gather up the copies with the blunder, but they were not entirely successful.
Why is this man smiling? He won the presidency!
Carter-Reagan in 1980: • Polling failures: • The national polls were widely criticized for not predicting the magnitude of Reagan’s victory. • Most polls showed a very tight race. • Once again, polling did not continue right through the end of the campaign.
Carter-Reagan in 1980: • Polling failures: • Gallup’s final survey gave Reagan 47 percent, Carter 44 percent, and Anderson (I) 8 percent. • Reagan got 51 percent of the vote to 41 percent for Carter and 7 percent for Anderson. • Reagan received an electoral landslide with 489 electoral votes to 49 for Carter.
Why is this man smiling? He just defeated Carter!