>From www.counterpunch.org

Anti-Chavez Pollsters Panic
Fix Numbers; Reinvent Venezuela
By JUSTIN DELACOUR

As the August 15 referendum on whether Hugo Chavez should continue as
president looms in Venezuela, anti-Chavez pollsters have begun
reluctantly issuing polls showing Chavez in the lead. In June, the
Washington-D.C. based polling firm Greenberg Quinlan Rosner Research
Inc.--working on behalf of the opposition--conducted a poll showing that
49 percent of Venezuela's registered voters would support President
Chavez versus 44 percent that would vote to recall him. Another June
poll by the Venezuelan firm DATOS--also commissioned by the
opposition--gave Chavez 51 percent of support, against 39 percent who
would vote against him.

Recently Chavez challenged other Venezuelan polling firms aligned to the
opposition to release the results of their latest polls. Venezuelan
Information Minister Jesse Chacon has claimed to have copies of these
polls--which favor Chavez--and has threatened to publish them if the
polling firms do not come forward.

One should not mistakenly conclude that these polls vindicate the
anti-Chavez pollsters as "unbiased."Rather, in the hour of truth, some
pollsters--after having long engaged in highly biased polling designed
to demoralize the government's supporters and to embolden the
opposition--will issue less biased polls in a last-ditch effort to
salvage their own credibility in the face of impending defeat.

In early February 2003, the anti-Chavez Venezuelan polling firms
Datanalisis and Consultores 21 held a joint press conference in Caracas
claiming to be "neutral parties"in the country's deeply polarized
political conflict. Just over two weeks before the press conference, I
reported that Datanalisis' President Jose Antonio Gil Yepes had told the
Los Angeles Times in July 2002 that Chavez "has to be killed."I pointed
out that a simple glance at Datanalisis' website revealed "the kind of
blatant political partisanship that one normally does not associate with
respectable polling operations"(as this report goes to print,
Datanalisis' website has been running John Kerry's Chavez-bashing
misstatement at the top of their "news"column for over a month).

Since I first reported on Datanalisis' blatant partisanship and biased
polling, Gil Yepes has mysteriously disappeared as a public spokesperson
for his company (although he occasionally pops up brandishing a letter
from L.A. Times correspondent T. Christian Miller, who now supposedly
claims that the pollster did not have criminal intent when he told
Miller that Chavez "has to be killed").

With Gil Yepes' reputation in question, the job of restoring
Datanalisis' mythic neutrality was left to company director Luis Vicente
Leon. Never mind that Leon had also been making blatantly anti-Chavez
statements to the press long before Gil Yepes blurted out his homicidal
fantasies to the L.A. Times. In Venezuela, where Chavez-bashing
journalists abound, "neutrality"means telling the business-controlled
propaganda apparatus what it wants to hear.

Thus, in the spirit of "neutrality,"Leon made a startling announcement
at the conference of February 2003. Although it had long been
established that Chavez enjoyed his highest levels of support among the
poor, Leon declared that Datanalisis' latest "poll"disproved the
"myth"that public opinion was divided along class lines. According to
Leon, "people of lower incomes"had become even more inclined to reject
Chavez than the rest of Venezuelan society.

For anyone even slightly in tune with reality, Leon's claim should have
sent off alarm bells. Hardly more than two months before, Gil Yepes
himself told the Associated Press that_while only 30 percent of the
overall Venezuelan population supported the government_45 percent of the
poor still approved of Chavez. Setting aside the question of whether or
not Gil Yepes' figures were based on methodologically sound polling
(that issue will be taken up in the second part of this series), the
figures suggested that the poor were more than twice as inclined to
support Chavez as the rest of society, a finding that was consistent
with past polls and election returns. Given that Venezuela's poorest
stratum (stratum E) accounts for just over 40 percent of the adult
population, the only way Gil Yepes could arrive at an overall 30 percent
approval rating amid 45 percent support for Chavez among the poor is if
the President's approval rating among the non-poor was close to 20
percent.

Did Leon actually expect people to believe that_in the course of two
months_the poor had gone from being more than twice as likely to support
Chavez to rejecting him at a higher rate than the middle and wealthier
strata?

Puzzled by Leon's claim, I decided to ask Jose Miguel Sandoval_an expert
on Latin American opinion polls at the University of North Carolina at
Chapel Hill_how the political views among Venezuela's poor could undergo
such a dramatic shift. Sandoval replied that reports of "drastic changes
of opinion in a short period of time are not to be taken seriously,
particularly in Venezuela, where opinions are well entrenched."
Curiously, Leon's dubious "finding"of the "myth"of a class divide
appeared just in time for the Venezuelan opposition's new U.S. campaign
strategists to spin the same story.

As the Washington Post's Scott Wilson reported, prominent members of the
Venezuelan opposition traveled to Washington in January 2003 and began
consulting informally with Democratic Party whore-of-convenience James
Carville. Soon thereafter, the Democratic Party polling firm Greenberg
Quinlan Rosner Research (GQR)_the company of Carville's fellow whore and
Clintonite pollster Stanley Greenberg_popped up in Venezuela working on
behalf of the opposition.

In a bracing demonstration of U.S. bipartisanship at the service of
Uncle Sam's reactionary foreign policy, GQR joined forces with the
Republican polling firm Public Opinion Strategies to carry out "polls"on
behalf of the opposition. In March 2003, GQR released a misleading
statement that its findings contrasted with "the assumption of many
analysts that Venezuela is divided between the upper- and middle-class
opponents of Chavez and his lower-class supporters."

The strategy was clear; in order to beat Chavez, GQR _like
Datanalisis_sought to deny the government of its base.

The only problem was that GQR's denial of a class divide and
Datanalisis' claim that the poor were now even more disapproving of
Chavez than middle and wealthier strata were strongly contradicted by
the actual results of the GQR-POS "poll". The "poll"showed that the poor
(stratum E) and the relatively poor (stratum D)_which together represent
about 80 percent of Venezuela's adult population_were more than twice as
likely to continue supporting Chavez than the middle to wealthier
strata.

As it turned out, Datanalisis' claim that the poor had turned against
Chavez with greater vehemence than middle to wealthier strata was
plainly dishonest. Between November 2002 and February 2003_the period of
business-led economic sabotage against the Venezuelan government and
people_Datanalisis temporarily stopped sending field workers into
Chavista-controlled slums. Due to the heightening of resentment towards
biased pollsters as well as increasing levels of crime resulting from
the misery induced by the economic sabotage, field workers could not
safely perform surveys.

In other words, Leon relied on telephone polls for his claim that
lower-income respondents had turned strongly against Chavez
(Datanalisis' website acknowledged that its December 2002 poll regarding
the opposition's so-called "general strike"was conducted by telephone).
The sociologist Greg Wilpert, who resides in Caracas, estimates that
only 50 percent of Venezuelan households have mainline telephones,
meaning that Datanalisis could scarcely have polled stratum E (the poor)
during the period on which Leon based his deceitful claim.

Now, as the opposition's campaign is clearly faltering and Venezuela's
poor appear poised to turn out en masse against the recall of President
Chavez, the failure of the anti-Chavez pollsters' underhanded attempts
to deny the government of its long-standing base becomes increasingly
clear.

Justin Delacour is a freelance writer and recent graduate of the Masters
program in Latin American Studies at the University of New Mexico. He
has written for Latin America Data Base, a University of New
Mexico-based news service. He receives email at [EMAIL PROTECTED]

This article originally appeared in NarcoNews

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