-Caveat Lector-

 http://www.msnbc.com

 Clinton doing well in opinion polls,
 but voter surveys tell a different story
 -----------------------------------------
 By Jay Severin
 MSNBC CONTRIBUTOR

 Politicians rely on polls to guide them in deciding
 Clinton's fate, but not the polls you are seeing.

 Sept. 14 -- Depending on what the polls say, an American
 presidency is about to end or will survive.  Approval
 ratings will shape news media coverage of the Clinton
 scandal; how the public perceives the event; whether and how
 aggressively Democrats stand by their president; whether and
 how aggressively Republicans insist on impeachment.

 Indeed, now that Bill Clinton's fate is officially a
 political matter and not a legal one, polls are the coin
 of the realm.

 But virtually none of the various poll results in
 newspapers, on television or quoted online are regarded
 seriously by members of Congress, who will be making these
 monumental decisions.  The politicians are relying on polls,
 but not the ones you are seeing.

 Some key findings from weekend polls taken after the release
 of the Starr report:

      Do you approve of the job President Clinton is doing?

      Source
              Approve
                           Disapprove
      NBC
              67%
                           30%
      CBS
              61%
                           34%
      ABC News
              59%
                           39%

      Is your opinion of Bill Clinton favorable
      or not favorable?

      Source
              Favorable
                           Unfavorable
      CBS
              39%
                           47%

      Should Congress censure the president?

      Source

              Yes
                           No
      CBS
              56%
                           32%
      CNN
              59%
                           35%

      Now that Congress has received the Starr report,
      should it hold impeachment hearings or drop
      the matter?

      Source
              Hold hearings
                           Drop the matter
      ABC News
              53%
                           42%

  The ABC phone survey of 508 adults on Saturday had a margin
  of error of plus or minus 4.5 percentage points.

  The CBS phone survey of 680 adults and the CNN phone survey
  of 902 adults, both on Saturday, had margins of error of
  plus or minus 4 percentage points.

  An NBC News poll of 783 adults taken Friday and Saturday
  had a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 points.
                Source: Associated Press


 How can you impeach a president with a 67 percent approval
 rating?  Here's how: members of Congress, especially
 Democrats, are chiefly concerned with one issue -- the
 impact of this political earthquake on their party and its
 1998 candidates.  The most compelling question in each
 lawmaker's mind is figuring out which position will help or
 hurt most on election day: defense of the president or the
 abandonment of him?

 ONLY VOTERS COUNT

 There is only one group that can meaningfully answer that
 question and it isn't just the American people.  A political
 fact of life is that the opinions politicians are concerned
 with are the American people who vote.

 It is another fact of life that only half of all Americans
 eligible to vote actually do so.  And those of us who do
 vote have markedly different (and fundamentally more
 conservative) attitudes than those who do not.

 As a result, the only public opinion polls that are going to
 genuinely influence this process are those that measure the
 attitudes of the people who are actually casting votes.
 These are not the polls you read about in the media.

 The oft-quoted public opinion polls are essentially
 insignificant samplings of the opinions of "randomly
 selected adults" or, perhaps even "registered voters."
 Fully half of these people are not voters.  What's more,
 these polls create a profile of the voting public that is a
 politically correct fantasy: each racial and ethnic group
 represented in exact proportion to their percentage of the
 population -- even though they have never voted in that
 volume.

 There are, however, accurate polls.  Actual participants in
 election day (known in the trade as "high-propensity likely
 voters") can be found through expensive and time-consuming
 professional screening techniques, which eliminate the
 ineligible and identify the actual voters.  These polls --
 privately commissioned by political parties or aspirants and
 conducted by such firms as Zogby International -- screen out
 all but actual voters, asking opinions of people who have
 voted in perhaps 10 of the last 11 elections.

 As a result, these high-priced and nearly always unpublished
 polls predict with great accuracy what will happen on
 election day.  And that, not popular sentiment, is what
 politicians want and need to know

 CLINTON'S NOT FARING WELL

 And guess what?  In the real-voter polls I have seen,
 Clinton is doing double-digits lower across the board than
 in the media polls.  Care for a brand new sampling of real
 voters' opinions?  Here are data from the very latest Zogby
 poll:

  -- Overall impression of Clinton: Favorable, 46 percent;
     Unfavorable, 51 percent.

  -- Proud/Ashamed Clinton is President: Proud, 31 percent;
     Ashamed, 50 percent.

  -- Clinton as Role Model: Positive, 22 percent; Negative,
     65 percent.

  -- If Clinton lied to grand jury, he should leave office:
     Agree, 57 percent.

  -- If Clinton encouraged others to lie, he should leave
     office: Agree, 60 percent.

 We can conclude from this that a major portion of the
 president's support right now is coming from people who
 don't vote.  This explains why Democrats are so worried
 about the Clinton factor, even though he seems to be doing
 so well in the opinion polls you're hearing about in the
 media.

 So public opinion polls are interesting, and they do give a
 reading of a type of popular opinion.  But public opinion is
 not what drives politics or politicians.  Voters do.

 Which raises this significant question: are the news media
 merely ignorant of the fact their polls present a frankly
 inaccurate (and unrealistically pro-Clinton) picture of
 voters' opinions?  Are they knowing counterfeiters?  Or is
 it a legitimate (and not entirely unreasonable) argument
 that the president appears to have the support of two out
 of three citizens -- whether they vote or not?

 Bogus polls aren't a crime but, in historic circumstances
 such as these, neither are they exactly a public service.
 Caveat emptor.



 Jay Severin is a veteran Republican campaign consultant and
 political analyst for MSNBC.





.

DECLARATION & DISCLAIMER
==========
CTRL is a discussion and informational exchange list. Proselyzting propagandic
screeds are not allowed. Substance�not soapboxing!  These are sordid matters
and 'conspiracy theory', with its many half-truths, misdirections and outright
frauds is used politically  by different groups with major and minor effects
spread throughout the spectrum of time and thought. That being said, CTRL
gives no endorsement to the validity of posts, and always suggests to readers;
be wary of what you read. CTRL gives no credeence to Holocaust denial and
nazi's need not apply.

Let us please be civil and as always, Caveat Lector.

========================================================================
To subscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SUBSCRIBE CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

To UNsubscribe to Conspiracy Theory Research List[CTRL] send email:
SIGNOFF CTRL [to:] [EMAIL PROTECTED]

Om

Reply via email to