Donate SIGN UP

Opinion Polls,anyone Been Asked?

Avatar Image
EDDIE51 | 16:41 Mon 30th Mar 2015 | ChatterBank
10 Answers
Just wondered if any on AB have actually been asked to participte in an opinion poll about an election?
Also how do they choose the people to ask? I am not sure the selection of participants is random, for example if it is a phone poll , those like me who only have a mobile will never be asked.
What steps are taken to ensure that all sections of society are equally represented?
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by EDDIE51. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Gallup street poll for the Independence nonsense last year, just a yes or a no was all they asked but I believe they use phones and all sorts of other media
No, never been asked.
I think they are stratified samples and they go to great lengths to get a representative mix of social groups. Polls often cover only around 2000 people I recall- the accuracy doesn't change much by taking samples of 10000; so I think the chances of a person being asked at any given election are pretty small given that there are, I would guess, around 30-40 million voters
I got polled prior to the 2014 Referendum. Asked a whole bunch of questions about Scottish Politics, etc. Can't remember who did the polling, but it was by telephone.
If I was asked I would give a wrong answer just to mess up their system.

I used to love the days when polls were inaccurate and you didn't know the result until it was announced.

I think John Major's win was the last time an exit poll was wrong.
Question Author
I was thinking it was mainly by phone and those with no landline are going to be underepresented. I was also thinking that such people are more likedly to be 'working class' and potential Labour voters. Is it posible there is an inbuilt bias against Labour for those reasons?
telephonic polls never really recovered from wrongly predicting the Presidential election in ? 1945
Chicago Trib carried the headline "Dewey by a landslide"
and everyone knows Dewey was never president

oops

I knew that pollsters skipped various people - you dont want 70% unemployed in your poll or no OAPs because OAPs are renowned for getting out of bed and voting on polling day...

but google
opinion polls quota filling

debate I had not realised has been raging for fifty years on that one
( enough links to make your eyes glaze over )
// If I was asked I would give a wrong answer just to mess up their system. //

a poll of one is gonna be pretty unrepresentative - a poll of 100 is better and a poll of 1,000 even better

so the larger the poll the less the wobble ( plus or minus 3% seems common ) Jim'll fill in the technical bit - standard error of the mean I think.

Thatcher's election was wrongly predicted - by 2%
and that has happened to Netanyahu recently - too close to call and then he won a clear majority....

IN those two, the pollsters agonised ( coz they lose money if they call it wrong see ?) and put in a wobble for small poll numbers and then a wobble for quota filling and then a wobble for dont-knows not following the distribution of the do-knows
and they still didnt get the right answer on the day and concluded....

people had been intentionally misleading the pollsters

Question Author
PP telephone polls in 1945? I am not surprised they got it wrong, I would not think even 5% of 'ordinary' people had a phone then, they would have been for the rich and famous only.
I do 'YouGov' polls online - over the year they touch on various topics and yes at the moment the emphasis is on Political matters.

1 to 10 of 10rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Opinion Polls,anyone Been Asked?

Answer Question >>

Related Questions

Sorry, we can't find any related questions. Try using the search bar at the top of the page to search for some keywords, or choose a topic and submit your own question.