
The Trouble with Polls and Focus Groups
The tools of the political trade seem shopworn this year
By
JOE KLEIN
Saturday, Sep. 25, 2004
There is a long-standing Hollywood fantasy about how to succeed in
American politics. From Mr. Smith Goes to Washington to Bulworth, the
story is the same: the hero is liberated when he breaks free from
political convention and starts speaking from the heart. In the old
days, Mr. Smith fought political bosses. Nowadays the bosses are
political consultants. Senator Bulworthin Warren Beatty's 1998
filmis liberated after deciding to commit suicide while watching
his re-election ads.
Reality, unfortunately, is stingy with outspoken political heroes.
Mavericks tend to lose, even compelling ones like John McCain. There
is a reason for that: inconvenient truths are inconvenient to
someone. And passion can be scary. McCain's assault on Pat Robertson
and Jerry Falwell cost him dearly in the 2000 campaign. Howard Dean's
anger was causing him to lose altitude long before he screamed. Which
is why politicians have concocted an entire industrythe polling and
consulting wizardocracydevoted to telling them what not to say.
From Merlin to Rove, the most powerful adviser has been the one who
says, "My crystal ball says, Don't go there" or "If you say that,
Your Majesty, the Goths won't be happy."
The modern tricks of the wizardocracypolls and focus groupsare
not inherently malevolent. They are only as banal as the people who
read them. Bill Clinton was a master: it was a focus group that
taught him that it was better to "invest" in education than to
"spend" on it. Clinton also knew when to ignore the polls, as he did
on the Mexican bailout. Most pols aren't so clever, though. This year
John Kerry and George W. Bush are relying on ancient market-tested
formulations like (in Kerry's case) "Health care is a right, not a
privilege" and (in Bush's case) "You know how to spend your money
better than the government does." Which leads me to wonder if the
golden age of campaign wizardry is coming to a close. The tools of
the trade seem shopworn this year.
Take polling, please. The vast majority of Americansas many as 90%,
pollsters have told me privatelyrefuse to answer questions when the
wizard calls (although the number is marginally better this hot
election year). People who use cell phones exclusively, mostly
younger voters, are unreachable. The wizards say they can correct for
these things, by "weighting" their pollsthat is, giving
disproportionate weight to members of underrepresented groups like
young people. But surely that makes polling less scientific and more
speculative. It means polls should be trusted only to verify broad
shiftsBush moved ahead in the presidential race after the
Republican Conventionrather than specific point spreads. There are other problems. Volatile times make for less accurate
polling. The wizards base their model electorates, inevitably, on who
voted last time. Earth-shattering events like the 9/11 terrorist
attacks and the war in Iraq could yield a substantially different
electorate in 2004, but no one knows whether that means, for
instance, that there will be a surge of military-draft-fearing
18-to-24-year-olds coming out to vote this year. The subject of Iraq,
in itself, has to be hard to poll; people are torn among their
loyalty to the troops, their lack of knowledge about a previously
obscure part of the world and the nagging sense that something has
gone quite wrong. Mixed feelings are difficult to quantify.
I went to Kansas City, Mo., last week to watch Peter Hart conduct a
focus group of more or less undecided voters. Focus groups are a
powerful political aphrodisiac: civilians tell the wizards how to rub
them the right way. But they are also an insidious reversal of the
political process, turning followers into leaders. Watching Hart, a
pioneer and master of the idiom, trying to elicit responses from a
surly group of citizens, I began to wonder whether focus groups have
outlived their usefulness. The group was almost entirely predictable.
They said Bush was a regular guy and Kerry seemed aloof. They said
they wanted more specifics from the candidates and more high-minded
coverage from the media, but the information they possessed seemed to
come mostly from negative ads. It was synthetic conversationthe
kind of faux intimacy common to reality-TV showsand yet I sensed
some frustration among the participants. They were looking for a
quality in the candidates they couldn't quite describe.
Finally, Hart asked what advice they would whisper in the next
President's ear. "My opinion doesn't have to count," said John Kenny,
a Bush voter. It took a second before I realized that Kenny was
delivering a revolutionary message, undermining the very purpose of
the focus group: Don't listen to me! The next President, he said, has
to "stand up on his own and do what he thinks is right."
Kenny was pleading for leadership. It was the missing piece, the
source of the frustration I had sensed, indescribable by the
civilians because true leadership means taking the country to a new
place and describing the journey in words that are new and fresh,
specific and true. The folks in Kansas City were looking for Mr.
Smith.
Email the Columnist | More Columns By Joe Klein
Joe Klein is a senior writer for TIME Magazine based in New York and Washington, D.C. He wrote the critically-acclaimed novel "Primary Colors." [more]
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