baboon2004
Darned cockwombles.
the thing that was new for this election (to me, anyway) was all these predictor percentage sites: 538 stating clinton with a 71.6% (or whatever) chance of winning, the ny times gauging it at 89%, etc. they come off as so declarative, people started to get hung up on them and seemed to convince themselves that the election was one way when it was really quite another way. i know those percentages are based on an aggregate of polling data but it's different from just seeing poll results.
that's a good point - the poll aggregators suggest certainty in a way that bears no relation to reality. The NYT swingometer on election night was mesmerising - somehow in the course of a few hours we went from a 90% likelihood of a Democrat victory to the opposite.
It'll be interesting to see whether polls really are discredited on either side of the Atlantic in future. I doubt they will be, and I reckon next year most will make the same mistake of underestimating Le Pen because polling doesn't properly reflect the support for her ideology of hatred. Personally, I think I've learned my lesson, after failing to heed the lessons of the 2015 UK GE and Brexit and blithely assuming that 'of course Clinton will win, even if not by as much as some believe'.
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