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Re: Will Scotland Leave the UK?
Ed Balls talking balls.
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Given that half a dozen reputable polling companies have failed to produce such a poll in public at any time in the last 24 months, the claim is bizarre. |
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If the government ordered a Yougov poll using taxpayers money, then it should be available to the public. |
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Bizarre it may be Chris but the fact stands there is a poll which, as correctly identified by an indiviudual via a letter to the press, Mr Cameron has refused, and continues to refuse, to publish. The content of the poll, whatever it might be, could be easily established should Mr Cameron elect to publish same. He won't. Essentially someone privy to certain information, using a pseudonym for clearly obvious reasons, wrote to the paper alleging that there was a poll that the Cabinet Office were suppressing and, by bizarre coincidence, that happened to be exactly the case. What are the chances? Interestingly (and I'm happy to be corrected) I'm not aware of any Government or Cabinet source coming out and categorically denying the allegation that the poll shows a rise in the support for the Yes vote or putting the Yes vote in the lead. Have you ever considered the possibility that the half a dozen reputable polling companies in whom you place so much stock might just be providing us with the results others want us to see? Just a thought. |
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You can't seriously be suggesting that manipulation of polls doesn't exist? You've even gone so far as to allege as much about some of the survation polls, have you not? |
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As a general statement, the latter I think is reasonable, even without specific evidence. The former, I believe, requires specific evidence to back it up. As you have (almost) remembered, there are questions over the legitimacy of some polls in the indy referendum. As it happens it's Panelbase, not Survation. Panelbase had to close its panel to new members earlier this year because it suspected it was being flooded with nationalists posing as others in order to try to skew the results towards Yes. However, I don't believe any of that justifies the leaden paranoia evident in your earlier comment which (and please correct me if I've misunderstood you), implied a co-ordinated, deliberate campaign of misinformation spanning multiple unconnected polling companies who have been commissioned by multiple unconnected clients, from both sides of the independence debate. Do you have any evidence of this? |
Re: Will Scotland Leave the UK?
If there was a poll indicating "Yes", wouldn't it be one of many? If it is an isolated example, then it is meaningless and hadn't been properly carried out.
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I don't believe I've segued anywhere to be honest. Did I state "the Scottish referendum polls are being manipulated"? My "earlier comment" wasn't a comment Chris, you have indeed misunderstood me, it was a question. I implied nothing. I asked if you had ever "...considered the possibility". That said, it is not unheard of for allegations to have been levelled at multiple polling agencies. In this particular instance (the independence dabate) I don't have evidence of poll manipulation but then again I have no need for evidence as I haven't stated such things to be fact. I'm content to know that poll manipulation exists because it has been manifestly proven to be fact in certain cases, I don't believe I have said it is the case in this situation. Now, has any Government or Cabinet source come out and categorically denied the allegation that the poll shows a rise in the support for the Yes vote or putting the Yes vote in the lead? |
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As for notion it's unlikely. Polling companies work for profit and many of them trade upon their reputation and whilst a few, less-reputatable, pollsters might produce favourable results most will not. It's in their commerical interests to get it right. YouGov are a international polling organisation, they're not going to throw away their reputation to rig a poll result. Also when multiple polls are saying the same thing then it's also unlikely to be rigged unless they're all in on it. |
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Now, setting aside the fact that nowhere did I allege or state that the independence polls were or are rigged - but acknowledging that such behaviours are entirely possible - is anyone aware of any Government or Cabinet source having come out to categorically deny the allegation by the pseudonym correspondent that the unpublished Government commissioned tax-payer funded YouGov poll shows a rise in the support for the Yes vote or putting the Yes vote in the lead? |
Re: Will Scotland Leave the UK?
They do weighting on nearly all polls which changes the results of the poll anyway. The way the weighting is done tend to make results vary quite a bit depending on how it's done. So a single result could get presented to everyone with numerous different values.
Organisations will often pay for polls to be done by many pollsters in secrecy and then use the data from the one that makes them look best and only mention that poll. With there being such a variation between some pollsters, no doubt could get results that suit you best. |
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