Election-Time Polls: Manipulating The Odds Or Predicting The
Winner?
Election pre-polling/exit polls, can be a controversial
ingredient and a shadow player. But only if viewed as a staged and paid- for
manipulation, a rigged projection. Those who want all election polls banned
subscribe to this idea, supported invariably by the side that looks bad in
early polling.
However, whatever be the pros and cons, the Election
Commission has banned exit polls between October 12th 2015, when the
first phase of polling for the Bihar Legislative Assembly begins, and November
5th , when the fifth and last phase of polling ends.
Notwithstanding the elimination of exit polls in this
instance, except at the close, and before the results are expected on the 8th
of November; most people see polling as a professional exercise to predict who
will win, and in a secondary and broader sense, who, and what, do the voters
want. The jury is definitely out on the ability of polls to influence the
outcome.
In the case of the Bihar Legislative Assembly Elections
for 243 seats, it looks as yet, after 4 pre-poll surveys, that it will be a
closely contested thing, with two of the polls giving it to the Nitish combine,
and the other two to the NDA. The phrase ‘neck-to-neck’ is being frequently
used, two days before the bugles sound.
The latest poll, announced on the 9th, does
hand it to the NDA. It will get more popular votes, they all suggest, but the
people of Bihar would like to see Nitish Kumar returned as Chief Minister. While
this may be an impossibility if the NDA does win, it suggests a close contest
also.
One poll suggests the gap, of 42% of the vote to NDA,
against 38% in favour of the Nitish/Lalu/Congress Combine, is narrow, and
within the margin of error of such pre-election polls.
So at least, in this instance, four times over, with the
pendulum swinging one way sometimes and otherwise the other, with findings from
different pollsters, there is little room for suspicion that these are
manipulated reports, faked to favour one side over another.
The pre-poll surveys of varying size, have apparently not
materially affected for or against - the ‘odds of victory’, ‘campaign morale’,
‘turnout’, the illegal ‘betting’ such as it is, and/or the ‘fundraising’ .
But banning the post poll exit surveys between the
phases, leaves it to the whisperers, over nearly a month, and the Satta Bazaar,
to indicate which way the wind is blowing. The Satta Bazaar, on the eve of the
first phase of the election, is saying the NDA will be able to form the
government on its own.
Certainly, both sides, the main contenders, have been
spending a lot of money on the campaign, and will attempt to continue doing so
between the phases. This even as there will be 80 observers just to watch money
flows used to ‘buy votes’ statewide; and 243 other general observers, throughout, and in between the polling on 12th,
16th, 18th, of October and the 1st and 5th
of November.
All 62, 779 polling booths will be overseen by central armed
police and monitored by drones, probably for the first time.
Researchers in America, the birthplace of election
polling, suggest that it is easier to predict who will win over who voters
like. The is what Justin Wolfers and David Rothschild, economists at Microsoft
Research had to say: “ Polls probing voters’ expectation yield more
accurate predictions of election outcomes than the usual questions about who
they will vote for”. Of course, this is America they are talking about.
But is voter psychology in urban and rural Bihar very
different? In America ‘voter expectation’ surveys only got it wrong 8% of the
time out of 214 surveys taken between 1932 and 2012. Neil King Jr wrote in the
Wall Street Journal (WSJ), that the ‘expectation question has ten times the
potency as who will you vote for’.
The rest, will be made plain on November 8th,
2015.
For: The Quint
(660 words)
October 9th, 2015
Gautam Mukherjee
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