RushbrookeRushbrooke
  • Services
    • Strategic Communications
    • Public Opinion research
    • Project Siting & Public Consultation
  • About
  • Contact
  • News
VintageBallot
October 6 2018

BC Municipal Madness: Making sense of the polls

Mike Witherly Media, Municipal Politics, Public Opinion Research #NPA #COPE, #VanMuni

There’s something happening here.  What it is ain’t exactly clear.

     -Buffalo Springfield

For what it’s worth, this is not your typical British Columbia municipal election cycle.  There is no man with a gun, but we are already seeing biblical-sized change:

  • The exodus of incumbents
  • The flood of new municipal parties
  • The plague of current and former MPs and MLAs tempted by municipal politics
  • The rebuke of ‘big money’
  • The smiting of the alphabetic advantage in Vancouver.

Amid the chaos and emerging public opinion research: 5 things to consider looking at public political polls:

  1. Start with the fundamentals. Especially in the early days of a campaign,  the relative brand strength of the parties and candidate name recognition can be better predictors than a ballot question that no one has really considered yet.
  2. Ease into the horserace.  Asking mayoral vote preference is like asking about entré choice for a lunch on October 20.  Both answers largely depend on the menu options.  Right now, few have even opened their menus.  Be careful about reading too much into pre-Thanksgiving ballot numbers.
  3. Geography matters.  In Vancouver municipal politics, there is a North / South divide (sorry Eastside / Westside traditionalists.)  Surrey has a large population spread over enormous geography.  This results in some distinct neighbourhoods with great divides between them—Newton is not Crescent Beach.  My point that is a good pollster will consider regional differences when sampling and weighting.  Find out how.
  4. Elections are decided by those that show up.  In BC civic elections, most don’t. Public polls typically report the intent of eligible voters.  This is why experienced It is a good idea told consider voter turnout in their analysis.  Turn out tends to increase with age and can vary dramatically between demographic groups.
  5. Get the crosstabs.  These are the tables that show questions tabulated against each other.  Most pollsters will provide tables of a publicly released poll’s “marquee questions” cross-tabulated against key demographic and geographic segments.  If you are looking for insight, the crosstabs are where you’ll find it.  If these aren’t available, ask why not.

NEXT BLOG: The 5 questions I would ask pollsters if I were a journalist

 

Wise words from Han Solo Revisiting the 2017 BC election

Related Posts

Clone Speech

BC Politics, Communication Strategy, Media, Public Opinion Research

Revisiting the 2017 BC election

The 2017 British Columbia provincial election saw the BC Liberals lose government to an NDP minority propped up by an awkward coalition with the Greens.   The preceding drama included a controversial throne speech and Hail Mary attempt to force an election.  To make sense of it all, I revisited a dataset from the end of June 2017.   As luck […]

Kardashian Analytica

Communication Strategy, Media, Media Relations

Cambridge Analytica is more Kardashian than Machiavellian

Don’t believe the hype; consider it in context.  Here are four observations about Cambridge Analytica and the controversy that rocketed the company from obscurity to infamy/public enemy: Timing is everything. Normally, accusations of violating Facebook’s terms of use and ignoring privacy laws do not merit coverage on CNN (or any other national mainstream news outlet).  But, […]

vlcsnap-2017-03-30-03h24m35s506

Communication Strategy, Media, Media Relations, Services

Skype: Just because you can, doesn’t mean you should.

I love Fox News, but it is only available to me as a blurry unwatchable mess (i.e. standard definition channel.) [UPDATE: Fox News is now available to me in the full glory of HD.] In actual #RealNews reality, I have always admired the production quality of Fox News—everything and everybody always looks great.  Production values […]

Search

Recent Posts

  • Revisiting the 2017 BC election
  • BC Municipal Madness: Making sense of the polls
  • Wise words from Han Solo
  • Cambridge Analytica is more Kardashian than Machiavellian
  • Are you ready for a double ender?
© Copyright 2020. Rushbrooke Communications Inc.