And the other side...

Those faulty exit polls were sabotage
Dick Morris
http://www.thehill.com/morris/110404.aspx

By now it is well-known and a part of the 2004
election lore how the exit polls by the major
television networks were wrong. 

Likely this faux pas will assume its place among
wartime stories alongside the mistaken calls on
Florida�s vote for one side and then for the other in
the 2000 election. But the inaccuracies of the media�s
polling deserve more scrutiny and investigation. 

Exit polls are almost never wrong. They eliminate the
two major potential fallacies in survey research by
correctly separating actual voters from those who
pretend they will cast ballots but never do and by
substituting actual observation for guesswork in
judging the relative turnout of different parts of the
state. 

So reliable are the surveys that actually tap voters
as they leave the polling places that they are used as
guides to the relative honesty of elections in Third
World countries. When I worked on Vicente Fox�s
campaign in Mexico, for example, I was so fearful that
the governing PRI would steal the election that I had
the campaign commission two U.S. firms to conduct exit
polls to be released immediately after the polls
closed to foreclose the possibility of finagling with
the returns. When the polls announced a seven-point
Fox victory, mobs thronged the streets in a joyous
celebration within minutes that made fraud in the
actual counting impossible.

But this Tuesday, the networks did get the exit polls
wrong. Not just some of them. They got all of the Bush
states wrong. So, according to ABC-TV�s exit polls,
for example, Kerry was slated to carry Florida, Ohio,
New Mexico, Colorado, Nevada and Iowa, all of which
Bush carried. The only swing state the network had
going to Bush was West Virginia, which the president
won by 10 points.

To screw up one exit poll is unheard of. To miss six
of them is incredible. It boggles the imagination how
pollsters could be that incompetent and invites
speculation that more than honest error was at play
here.

The mistaken exit polls infiltrated all three networks
and the cable news outlets and had a chilling effect
on the coverage of election night. 

While all anchors refrained from announcing the
exit-poll results, it was clear from the context of
their comments that they expected Kerry to win and
wondered if Bush could hold any key state. 

Indeed, one network hesitated to call Mississippi for
Bush because of the uncertainty injected by the bogus
exit polls. Dark minds will suspect that these polls
were deliberately manipulated to dampen Bush turnout
in the Central, Mountain, and Pacific time zones by
conveying the impression that the president�s
candidacy was a lost cause.

The exit pollsters plead that they oversampled women
and that this led to their mistakes. But the very
first thing a pollster does is weight or quota for
gender. Once the female vote reaches 52 percent of the
sample, one either refuses additional female
respondents or weights down the ones one subsequently
counted. 

This is, dear Watson, elementary.

Next to the forged documents that sent CBS on a jihad
against Bush�s National Guard service and the planned
�60 Minutes� ambush over the so-called missing
explosives two days before the polls opened, the
possibility of biased exit polling, deliberately
manipulated to try to chill the Bush turnout, must be
seriously considered.

At the very least, the exit pollsters should have to
explain, in public, how they were so wrong. Since
their polls, if biased or cooked, represented an
attempt to use the public airwaves to reduce voter
turnout, they should have to explain their errors in a
very public and perhaps official forum. 

This was no mere mistake. Exit polls cannot be as
wrong across the board as they were on election night.
I suspect foul play. 

-------------------------
Morris is the author of Rewriting History, a rebuttal
of Sen. Hillary Clinton�s (D-N.Y.) memoir, Living
History. 

--- Angel Stewart <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> -------------------
> Published on Thursday, November 4, 2004 by
> CommonDreams.org/
> 
> http://www.commondreams.org/views04/1104-38.htm
> 
> *The Ultimate Felony Against Democracy
> by Thom Hartmann*



                
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