Voting Incentives Question
By Ian
When I read articles like this one on the numerous and subtle shifts in leads among candidates, I'm always left wondering if the writers (and the pundits and campaign pros they discuss) are really getting what's happening when a poll starts to show a "shift".
So I'm torn. Are people changing their minds as new things come to light? Or are polls picking up a solidifying base of people that were either 1) motivated to answer a poll since it's close enough that folks aren't going to respond with the "how early do we start celebrating Christmas" sensation, or 2) getting a larger and more accurate response rate from "likely voters" because people are becoming solidified in decisions that were not yet set? Or some factor not mentioned?
(The above is referencing an amount of people big enough to register as a shift in repeated polling. Certainly, some people are changing their minds.)
I'm rather adamant in my belief that polling is highly flawed largely because of their prominence. They tend to affect the people their meant to sample, the responses are far from accurately given, and the questions are often far from neutral.
I'm just not convinced that much of the campaigning is "swaying" voters from one side to another, so much as it might be inspiring enough to get people to answer "yes" when the monotone voice says "are you likely to vote in November." If this is true, then it might indicate that negative campaigning plays a bigger part than we'd like to admit. Maybe I'm off-base, but I tend to think outrage over an issue might be a bigger motivator than mild indifference. And if that is so, then the best place to start investing money in the campaign is wherever it appears you could motivate a group by giving it something to vote against. (For instance, announcing pro-choice candidate votes in highly conservative areas. Or highlighting spending profligacy to those who consider themselves highly fiscally responsible.)
The old adage is that the only way to make the choir sing is to preach to them. In this election year, when the outcome is expected to be close, each vote is more and more dear (as the decisive group gets smaller and smaller in expectation, each vote nears the point where it is viewed as pivotal, and indeed may well be), a lot of money is being spent on "shoring up the bases" on both sides. But perhaps the real gain is on those people who haven't yet heard something pro or con about a candidate in their particular area of interest?
I know commenting isn't frequent here (and that's perfectly fine as long you come back -- we like having you, loud or quiet) unless you want to talk about Iraqi Dinar, but if anyone has some thoughts on this, I'd love to hear them...
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