so this is fun the pollers try to get around the shy trump voter by asking them who they think their friends or family will vote for but suppose people are shy about trump their friends or family--second order preference falsification! https://t.co/QD2QqPpvKk
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I maintain the issue isn't people lying to pollsters but rather hanging up on them, in which case you can estimate this pretty well by looking at differences in response rates per party affiliation, age, education etc, and use those response rates in your normalization.
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There is also the issue of pollsters doing things like asking to speak to the youngest member of the household, etc, which I would put into the "obvious fraud" column. But for honest pollsters, tracking shy voters shouldn't be hard.
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yeah that's fascinating hmm
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ask how they will vote, how friends and family will vote, how friends and family of friends and family will vote, etc, until two consecutive questions poll about the same
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the causal answer is yes, absolutely you could, but i sincerely doubt this is an election to build Any kind of meaningful dataset from
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It's falsification all the way down
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