Los Angeles Times

It’s election day in Alabama

Why is it so hard to know who’s ahead in the crucial campaign?

- By David Lauter david.lauter@latimes.com

The Senate race between Roy Moore and Doug Jones has confounded pollsters.

WASHINGTON — It’s one of the most closely watched Senate campaigns in years — and one of the most confoundin­g. The battle in Alabama between Roy Moore and Doug Jones has pollsters thoroughly flummoxed.

In recent days, reputable polling organizati­ons have produced results ranging from a 10-percentage-point lead for Democrat Jones (Fox News) to a 9-point lead for Republican Moore (Emerson College).

Other recent polls include a Washington Post survey showing Jones ahead by 3 points, a CBS News/ YouGov survey showing Moore up by 6 points and a Gravis poll putting Moore’s lead at 4 points.

Here’s a closer look at what’s going on.

Why has it been so hard to poll the race?

The central problem is predicting who will vote.

For polling organizati­ons, calling potential voters and counting their responses is often the easiest part of the job. The real challenge is to predict who is actually going to show up to cast a ballot.

In the last two off-year elections in Alabama, somewhere between 40% and 50% of registered voters cast ballots. The Alabama secretary of state has estimated that this year’s special election will draw a smaller turnout, more on the order of 25%.

As the electorate shrinks, it usually doesn’t do so evenly. One side or the other usually benefits. Pollsters need to adjust their results to take into account who is most likely to turn out.

Polling organizati­ons have a variety of techniques to try to forecast what the electorate will look like, and right now, those different approaches are giving very different answers.

How much difference can a turnout model make? A lot. To see how much, the pollsters at SurveyMonk­ey ran an experiment last week. They surveyed 1,559 registered voters in Alabama. Then they applied a series of different turnout models to their data.

One approach simply asks people how sure they are that they’ll vote.

When SurveyMonk­ey did that, counting as a likely voter those who said they were certain to vote or probably would, they found Jones had a 9-point lead over Moore.

Another approach looks at people’s voting history: Rather than ask them about their future behavior, ask them about the recent past. Did they vote in the last couple of elections?

When SurveyMonk­ey defined as likely voters those who reported that they had voted in 2014 (plus those who were too young in 2014 but said they were certain to vote this time), Moore led by 3 points.

Testing other approaches, the pollsters came up with results ranging from an 8-point Jones lead to a 9-point lead for Moore — all using the same underlying survey data.

On Monday afternoon, Monmouth University released a survey showing three different turnout models. Under a standard midterm turnout similar to 2014, Moore would lead, 48% to 44%. A higher turnout, more similar to a presidenti­al year, would yield a lead for Jones. And a turnout model based on the midterm election last month in Virginia showed the two candidates tied, with 6% still undecided, they found.

Why is the variation in results bigger than usual in this election?

Most of the time, pollsters have a pretty good idea of who will show up: Elections tend to follow predictabl­e patterns.

Those patterns don’t exist in this case. It’s a special election, with nothing else on the ballot in much of the state, being held in December, which is not a typical election time. So past voter history isn’t as useful as usual.

That alone would greatly complicate predicting who will vote. On top of that, Moore is a polarizing candidate with some deeply committed followers, but also many Republican­s who disapprove of him. And the multiple accusation­s by women who say he pursued them when they were teenagers add a whole additional layer of complexity.

Are there other significan­t difference­s between the polls? Maybe. The two most recent polls conducted by telephone with live interviewe­rs, who called both cellphones and landlines, were the ones done by Fox and the Washington Post. Both showed Jones ahead.

By contrast, automated polls, which by law cannot call cellphones, have tended to yield results more favorable to Moore. Pollsters who use automated techniques, which are much cheaper than live-interviewe­r polls, have a variety of ways to adjust for the limitation­s of their methodolog­y, but it’s possible that this time around, they are missing a significan­t part of the electorate.

The Fox poll found, for example, that Jones led by 30 points among people reached on cellphones, who tend to be younger than people who usually use a landline.

Could there be a “hidden vote” for one side or the other?

Perhaps some people don’t want to admit to an interviewe­r that they plan to vote for Moore, given the air of scandal surroundin­g him. In that case, the automated polls could be more accurate in showing Moore leading.

On the other hand, Moore’s supporters don’t seem shy about stating their position, as reporters on the ground in Alabama have found.

And it’s also possible that some longtime Republican­s don’t want to admit to a pollster that they’re planning to vote for a Democrat.

If the result is so uncertain, why bother with polling?

Everyone wants to know who’s going to win, but forecastin­g the outcome isn’t the only reason — or even the main reason — for polling.

Polls also tell us a lot about which voters are backing which candidate — younger Alabamians, especially younger women, favor Jones by a big margin, for example. Repeated polls can show how a race develops over time.

And polls can also tell us a lot about which issues have had an effect on voter opinions. As a result, they serve as a check on the self-serving spin that voters inevitably will hear starting Tuesday night, once the actual results are counted.

 ?? Joe Raedle Getty Images ?? DEMOCRAT DOUG JONES is favored by younger residents of Alabama, surveys show. But do they vote? A turnout of 25% is expected in Tuesday’s election.
Joe Raedle Getty Images DEMOCRAT DOUG JONES is favored by younger residents of Alabama, surveys show. But do they vote? A turnout of 25% is expected in Tuesday’s election.
 ?? Brynn Anderson Associated Press ?? REPUBLICAN ROY MOORE is a polarizing candidate. He has some deeply committed followers, but also many Republican­s who disapprove of him.
Brynn Anderson Associated Press REPUBLICAN ROY MOORE is a polarizing candidate. He has some deeply committed followers, but also many Republican­s who disapprove of him.

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