Hard News: Where are all the polls at?
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Tuesdays Newshub Reid Research poll = *sampling error of biblical proportions.*
But.....look at this
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-32751993 -
Trevor Nicholls, in reply to
Interpretation of scientific results is inherently subjective - despite most scientists being addicted to their denial of this fact.
This isn't true. Scientists are generally aware of the difference between reporting facts and offering interpretation, and scientists generally seek to test their interpretations by constructing experiments which will either convert interpretation into fact or dismiss it as erroneous speculation.
Perhaps you are confusing scientists with paid consultants.
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Just a comment about margins of error. At risk of 'splaining, most folks assume that the margin of error means the "real" result will be the stated number plus or minus the margin of error.
But these errors have a bunch of assumptions and what they really mean is the "real" number is PROBABLY within that range but it could be well outside that given number.
But there are other issues, a passing familiarity with stats should tell you that the margin should be smaller on the zero side. That is, if the number given is 20% then it should be +say 5% and minus say 3%, so right up front you know the margin of error is calculated in an unusual manner and you should treat it with suspicion.
But the biggest problem with those margins is they make assumptions about the sampling. They assume the sample is random and the survey companies are struggling with that now. They also assume the samples have certain distributions (remember normal distributions from school?).
Those assumptions are necessary to do simple stats but it's never certain the assumptions are valid.
It's possible to do better statistics and my guess is internal party polling probably uses much more sophisticated models and error reporting but statistics makes most folks head hurt and the media is just plain reluctant to try and present anything complex.
The result is, these entertainment polls with silly margins of error. They make for entertainment and sound bites and tweets but as for actually representing the opinion of the population - they're horrible.
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I guess all we have left now then is
the Wisdom of Crowds and
the Kindness of Strangers... -
linger, in reply to
And then there's the media phone-in/online audience opinion polls, with no attempt at random or representative sampling. Those would be "entertainment only" ... if they were entertaining rather than just infuriating.
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Dennis Frank, in reply to
Scientists are generally aware of the difference between reporting facts and offering interpretation, and scientists generally seek to test their interpretations by constructing experiments which will either convert interpretation into fact or dismiss it as erroneous speculation.
Yes, this general practice is a laudable mental discipline. I was referring to the myth of scientific objectivity, and the way scientists participate in public life. The media expect them to report facts but they normally get opinions instead. Since I graduated with a BSc in physics long ago, there's been an unending stream of such media misrepresentation of contraversial issues. Most obviously in recent years in climate science. Scientific assertions about whether or not the evidence means anthropogenic global warming is driving climate change have masqueraded as fact for many years because those making the claims (on both sides) believe they are reporting facts when they are actually reporting their interpretations.
Same happens with statistics, which probably originated the old adage about `lies, damned lies, & statistics'...
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Bart Janssen, in reply to
myth of scientific objectivity
There have been studies that show pretty compellingly that people who believe themselves to be objective (eg scientists) are more subject to confirmation bias than average.
However, when making comments on the meaning of data there is a difference between comments made from knowledge and comments made from ignorance. Both can be wrong but one is more likely to be wrong than the other. I rarely trust my accountant* to advise me on medical matters.
*lol as if I'd have an accountant.
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For Friday night poll junkies (let's get lives, people!) here's Roy Morgan latest:
NAT 40% LAB 39.5% GRN 9% NZF 6% MAO 2% ... rest irrelevant.
Least reliable of the pollsters, traditionally. But as a very rough guide, confirms the "all to play for" narrative rather than the TV3 Newshub loner.
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With those numbers I think the Maori party is the likely 'kingmaker'
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I think it's worth pointing out that one of the reasons practically all the polls before the 2017 UK general election were wrong was because they systematically under-represented the youth vote. That was deliberate: after the polling debacles of 2015, the pollsters made adjustments to their sampling to reflect what they expected turnout to look like, based on who actually turned up to the polls two years earlier. So polling samples were weighted towards older voters, on the assumption that most of the young wouldn't vote.
We now know that that was completely wrongheaded. It made no allowance for young voters' enthusiasm for Corbyn-style Labour policies that had not been on offer in 2015 (in particular, the abolition of tertiary fees). And it didn't anticipate the success of Momentum and other Labour-affiliated organisations and campaigns in mobilizing the youth and student vote, particularly around residential university campuses. That's why the Conservatives unexpectedly lost seats like Canterbury (main campus of the University of Kent) and, perhaps, Ipswich (home to the newly established University of Suffolk).
Could something similar happen in NZ? It's quite possible, but one of the reasons UK Labour was so unexpectedly successful in June was because it offered a complete break with the status quo. It promised an end to all student fees, starting in October 2017, for instance, not a "sensible" graduated abolition over several years. I do wonder if NZ Labour's residual tendency towards compromise and "sensible" options might blunt that message and prevent the kind of unanticipated "youth quake" we saw here 3 months ago.
But the only way of really proving the pollsters and the conservative newspapers and broadcasters wrong is to actually turn up and vote tactically for a change of government.
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Ben Austin, in reply to
I've been told by a friend that the phonebanking reception for Labour is still very positive for O-Belmont, fwiw
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A new Roy Morgan poll predicts a Labour/Green/Maori coalition as follows:
Labour (49 seats); Greens (11 seats) & Maori Party (2 seats): Total 62 seats
National (50 seats); NZ First (7 seats) & Act NZ (1 seat): Total 58 seats
Sample size: 866
Conducted: Aug 28 to Sept 10 -
look out for next weeks news hub Reid Research poll —99% sure it will be
so far out of whack with last nights Roy Morgon Poll and NBR Horizon poll.
Either Reid Research is right on the money or they are 100% wrong and will end up being the laughing stock of the polling community. -
Horizon polls have come up with some ridiculous numbers in the past, so I would treat this with a truckload of caution, but their latest poll in the NBR is not far off the general picture.
Except for the prospect of a second ACT MP. Oh the horror, the horror ...
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On current trend, more than 1 million advance votes will be cast before final election date (despite a shorter timeframe for advance voting!) -- in which case the polls (which legally can't ask anyone how they have already voted) can all bugger off.
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simon g, in reply to
There's been a lot of coverage of advance voting but less coverage of people not enrolling at all.
97% of the olds, but only 67% of the youngs. That makes any "youthquake" a fairly mild tremor ... so far. It's the difference between Labour having to accommodate Winston or the Greens.
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Tom Semmens, in reply to
97% of the olds, but only 67% of the youngs. That makes any "youthquake" a fairly mild tremor ... so far.
Has anyone reported the late enrolment pattern from last election?
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Some (very small) subset of the advance votes may also be last-minute registrations, because you can register at the same time as casting an advance vote (though not on the final polling day). But that data is not immediately available.
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izogi, in reply to
If that's the case then I'm most likely wrong. Ah well.
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izogi, in reply to
linger:
you can register at the same time as casting an advance vote (though not on the final polling day)
Does anyone know much about what Labour is talking about here?
The Labour Party is concerned voters who aren't enrolled are being turned away from advance voting booths.
I'd not been aware that advance voting stations doubled as enrolment stations. Is it meant to be all of them?
The article is also quite vague on detail and lacking conviction about how serious it is or isn't considered to be, but Labour seems to be saying that some unenrolled voters are being turned away from advance voting booths.
The General Secretary for the Labour Party, Andrew Kirton, is concerned the mistakes will affect Labour disproportionately.
More importantly, though, people shouldn't be denied the opportunity to vote when they're legally entitled to do so, irrespective of what impact it might or mightn't have on the Labour party, or any other party.
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linger, in reply to
From Emma’s post on advance voting:
Do I have to be enrolled?
No. We can enrol you in the advance voting booth and you can cast your vote at the same time. The only time you can’t enrol is on Election Day.Yes, that should be true at every advance venue. And yes, it would be extremely concerning if some officials were unaware of this.
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Some useful analysis of that landlords' poll by Thomas Lumley https://www.statschat.org.nz/2017/09/17/polls-that-arent-any-use/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+StatsChat+%28Stats+Chat%29
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Ben Austin, in reply to
Well I guess we'll see if my friend is a reliable source / analyst in a week!
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linger, in reply to
Could something similar [to Corbyn bringing out the youth vote] happen in NZ?
Danyl Mclauchlan’s analysis suggests we are unlikely to see any similarly strong effect, because the “missing” voters in the last few NZ elections were largely (i) recent immigrants, and (ii) NZ expats (mostly in Australia), rather than some homogenous radicalisable youth vote.
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