Six things we learned from election 2012

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Live by the sword, die by the sword.

HOW IS IT THAT the national media could not – or would not – foretell the Electoral College landslide that gave President Obama a second term?

Simple: A presidential landslide lacks the drama that attracts an audience.

The media – especially the entertainment medium of TV – love an interesting story, and a blowout is a bore.

So they overplay that one survey that suggests the race is neck-and-neck.

They emphasize polls that indicate a close race for the nationwide popular vote, without the context of explaining the outcome really involves electoral votes in only a handful of “swing states” – all of which Obama won.

They do stories on the “very real possibility” of an Electoral College tie, which would throw the race into the hands of a politically divided Congress.

Thrills! Chills! Suspense!

In short, they exaggerate the importance of their selective facts to create a compelling narrative about a close race.

And to keep you coming back for more.

HOW IS IT THAT professional pollsters could not foretell the Electoral College landslide that gave President Obama a second term?

Because a poll is basically bunk.

Different methods of gathering data, interpreting data, reporting data.

And every survey is outdated and irrelevant by the time all that gets done.

With a couple of exceptions.

On the day before the election, Nate Silver’s FiveThirtyEight poll gave Obama a nearly 90 percent chance of winning. That number had been high-70s, low-80s in the month before the election.

Another poll aggregator, the Princeton Election Consortium, gave the president probabilities of victory of more than 95 percent.

They were 100 percent correct. Silver correctly predicted the winner in all 50 states.
His system of aggregated analytics considers several local, state and national polls to determine probabilities for victory.

Most individual polls, however, are worthless.

TWO MONTHS AGO, Congressman Schilling sent us a press release to boast that his poll showed him leading by 13 points over his Democratic challenger, Cheri Bustos.

Last week we received a statement from the Illinois Republican Party that reported its polling showed GOP congressional candidates were leading in several closely contested districts, including Schilling’s 17th.

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