The problem of so-called “push polls” When advocacy calls are made under the gui
ID: 2946415 • Letter: T
Question
The problem of so-called “push polls”
When advocacy calls are made under the guise of research
This statement from AAPOR, American Association for Public Opinion Research, explains how to tell the difference between fraudulent political polls—commonly referred to as “push polls”—and legitimate polling, including message testing. AAPOR condemns political telemarketing under the guise of research and is committed to providing information that explains what this unethical campaign practice is and what you can do about it.
A “Push Poll” is not a Legitimate Poll
A so-called "push poll" is an insidious form of negative campaigning, disguised as a political poll. “Push polls” are not surveys at all, but rather unethical political telemarketing -- telephone calls disguised as research that aim to persuade large numbers of voters and affect election outcomes, rather than measure opinions. This misuse of the survey method exploits the trust people have in research organizations and violates the AAPOR Code of Professional Ethics and Practices.
Identifying Advocacy Calls Made Under the Guise of Research
Political telemarketing calls, when disguised as research, may sometimes be difficult to differentiate from a legitimate survey. Here are characteristics that will usually indicate to a respondent that the call is not a legitimate survey.
One or only a few questions are asked, all about a single candidate or a single issue.
The questions are uniformly strongly negative (or sometimes uniformly positive) descriptions of the candidate or issue.
The organization conducting the calls is not named, or a phony name is used.
Evasive answers are given in response to requests for more information about the survey.
In addition, the following characteristics will indicate to journalists, reporters, and survey professionals that a telephone call is not a legitimate survey.
The number of people called is very large, sometimes many thousands.
The calls are not based on a random sample.
It is difficult to find out which organization conducted the interviews.
Fraudulent Polls vs. Message Testing
The fact that a poll contains negative information about one or more candidates does NOT in and of itself make it a 'push poll.’ Political campaigns routinely sponsor legitimate “message-testing” surveys that are used by campaign consultants to test out the effectiveness of various possible campaign messages or campaign ad content, often including negative messages. Political message-testing surveys may sometimes be confused with fake polling, but they are very different. One way to tell is that message-testing surveys exhibit the characteristics of a legitimate survey, such as:
At the beginning of the call, the interviewer clearly identifies the call center actually making the calls. (However, legitimate political polling firms will often choose not to identify the client who is sponsoring the research, be it a candidate or a political party, since that could bias the survey results.)
The interview contains more than a few questions.
The questions usually ask about more than one candidate or mention both sides of an issue.
Questions, usually near the end of the interview, ask respondents to report demographic characteristics such as age, education level, and party identification.
The survey is based on a random sample of voters.
The number of respondents falls within the range of legitimate surveys, typically between 400 and 1500 interviews.
AAPOR stresses that these criteria apply most of the time, but exceptions will arise. Journalists and members of the public are encouraged to investigate allegations of “push polling” to ascertain whether or not the calling activity was carried out for legitimate research purpose
1.) What types of questions are usually on Push Polls?
2.) Write a question that could be included on a Push Poll. For example: “Given the recent revelation that President Trump kills puppies for fun, do you plan on voting for him in the next election?”
3.) Do questions like this give us any real idea of how people really feel?
Explanation / Answer
1) In Push polls , generally only a few questions are asked and the questions are aimed to sway the voters . Either all negative or all positive questions are asked . Means if the push poll motive is to influence the voters to incline towards a particular candidate , they may ask some questions revealing good qualities of that candidate or those questions revealing bad behaviour or wrong policies of the opponents.
2) Since the main motive of push polls is not the survey but to sway the voters , the questions can be positive or negative . For ex. Would you like a high school fail as your minister , given that candidate A is just 8th pass .
Another question be like : Candidate A spend lavishly on his livings , will you support such a candidate ?
3) I dont think that they would give any idea of how people really feel . Since these questions dont ask the voters what they want in a president . They just give a positive or negative condition and ask the opinion . When you are given a negative condition you will obviously oppose it . Voters have to compare all the candidates and select the best after comparing . So questions aimed to sway the voters can give the impression how a given population get influenced by others but not the real opinion of the voters .
Related Questions
Navigate
Integrity-first tutoring: explanations and feedback only — we do not complete graded work. Learn more.