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Op-Ed

Tim Graham: If 2016 Polls Weren't Bad Enough, 2020 Should Persuade You To Never Trust Them Again

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In every election cycle, there is only one poll that matters, and that is the election results. That has never been truer than in 2020.

Why should we have paid attention to the polls? As of Thursday morning, the popular vote margin was 2 percent — 50 percent for Democrat Joe Biden and 48 percent for President Donald Trump.

Here are some of the closing polls:

Quinnipiac University: Biden 50 percent, Trump 39 percent.

NBC News/Wall Street Journal: Biden 52 percent, Trump 42 percent.

Fox News: Biden 52 percent, Trump 44 percent.

CNN (likely voters): Biden 54 percent, Trump 42 percent.

RealClearPolitics average: Biden up 7.2 percent.

On Oct. 28, the ABC News/Washington Post poll preposterously posited Biden was leading Trump by 17 points in Wisconsin, 57 percent to 40 percent. The actual margin of Biden’s lead there as of Thursday was 0.7 percent.

Now ask yourself: If you’re favoring either one of these candidates, could these polls affect your decision on whether to vote?

They absolutely should not. Never, ever base your decision on whether to vote on pre-election polling. When compared with the actual vote count, those polls are fake news. They are absolutely worthless as measurements of the electorate.

They are damaging the legitimacy of our democracy, not helping it. When they’re this off-base, they lead to both sides of the divide feeling the system is rigged. What’s obviously rigged are these polls; they’re easily categorized as an alternative reality. It’s hard not to see intentional rigging, rather than some kind of accidental bias.

Everyone — including conservatives who don’t trust the media — makes political and journalistic decisions based on these badly concocted polls.

It’s the political equivalent of chewing on Tide Pods.

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Maybe you can’t just blame pollsters. We know Republicans might seem to alternate between complaining they never get called by pollsters and hanging up on pollsters. We can suspect many Trump supporters lie about their preference if they take a survey.

But we also know that these flocks of liberal pollsters stack their “turnout models” to their tastes of who “the people” are (or should be), and that we end up with shoddy results like a 12-point gap among “likely voters.”

Let’s all line up with Meghan McCain, who proclaimed on Twitter: “Modern American polling is dead and modern American pollsters should find another vocation so they stop wasting all of our collective time and helping to gaslight the media and American public.”

It makes you question every poll they’ve done on Trump in the last two years.

McCain added: “At what point is our collective media going to accept just how out of touch with the majority of the country they are?!? I predict they won’t, they will just quadruple down — rather than accept, learn and try to actually represent so many of the voters they so clearly disdain.”

The media pollsters assume the American electorate is always more liberal than it actually is. They have spent five years churning out surveys suggesting Trump was unelectable. Being wrong about his 2016 clash with Hillary Clinton never slowed them down.

Nine days before Election Day, NBC News White House correspondent Geoff Bennett tried to soothe liberal panic about the pollsters possibly getting it wrong again. It was a spoonful of fake sugar.

“Biden’s lead is bigger than Clinton’s was, edging out President Trump nationally and in nearly every battleground state,” he said. “Trump is … facing the worst polling position for a president seeking reelection since George H.W. Bush in 1992.”

Does anyone expect these major-media polling “experts” to assemble for an autopsy to evaluate how wrong they are, and how untrustworthy they have become?

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