Mason:
This is an interesting thread. I have two questions.
The first question involves potential bias of the sponsoring organization/entity that pays a polling firm to conduct a poll. The New York Times bills itself as "the paper of record" but is generally regarded (outside of New York) as a "liberal" newspaper. Some people, especially Trump supporters, believe The Washington Post is biased to the left. Flip the coin to the other side and some people believe the Fox News Channel is biased to the right. (A "librul" like me might say the Fox News Channel is "fair and balanced" - to the right!
)
I recall a statistics expert who worked for an insurance company that I was talking to on an airplane flight. We were discussing politics, so I asked him about the accuracy of polling. He responded (paraphrasing slightly): "Tell me the result you want and I'll give you the poll questions to produce that result." So, when these organizations commission a poll, what assurance do we have that the polling firm producing the results is more interested in satisfying their [paying] client than producing an accurate result?
The second question is from my girlfriend who is a very conservative Trump supporter. (That's right, I've hooked up with a very politically conservative lady friend.) With a tip of the hat to Paula Abdul
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xweiQukBM_k
I suppose it's a case of opposites attracting.
I don't know if she's been watching too much of the Fox News Channel, but she tells me she believes Trump supporters are intentionally lying to pollsters because they don't want to admit - to a pollster - that they intend to vote for Trump. Assuming there is some truth to this belief, how do pollsters detect (and adjust) for such a bias? More generally, how inaccurate can a poll be if a substantial percentage of the respondents choose to intentionally lie to the pollster?
Side note: This will never happen, but I think politics and elections would be much more interesting if all public polling was either banned or outlawed. People would be more inclined to actually go to the polls and vote if they didn't "know" (in advance) who was going to win.
Candidates could produce their own "private" polls - for internal use only - but public polling published in newspapers and on the internet should be banned. When it comes to politics, the only poll that really counts is the poll conducted on election day when voters cast their ballots.