Partly Cloudy
70°
Morris, IL
Partly Cloudy|Forecast »

Fox followers fail once again

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

His name is Nate Silver, a number-crunching whiz-kid who came to politics after helping to revolutionize baseball stats. His FiveThirtyEight blog aggregates and analyzes data from as many state and national polls as he can find — operating on the principle that the larger the sample, the smaller the margin of error.

In 2008, Silver called 49 of 50 states correctly.

Any poll can be wrong. However, if 18 out of 20 polls show Obama leading in Iowa, then there’s a high probability he’s ahead there. An 84.3 percent chance, Silver thought. (Silver forecast Minnesota as 99.7 percent likely for the president, Florida, 50.3 percent.)

Anyway, as the 2012 election approached, Silver’s numbers showed a steadily increasing likelihood of Obama’s winning at least seven of nine “swing” states, and hence the election. So did Princeton biophysicist Sam Wang’s, whose record is slightly better than Silver’s. Other data crunchers got similar results.

Confronted by unwelcome facts, Foxified pundits did the usual. They invented an alternative reality. One Dean Chambers, proprietor of the website unskewedpolls.com, began his analysis this way: “Nate Silver is a man of very small stature, a thin and effeminate man with a soft-sounding voice that sounds almost exactly like the ‘Mr. New Castrati’ voice used by Rush Limbaugh on his program.”

Incisive, don’t you think? Unintimidated, Silver responded sarcastically via twitter: “Unskewedpolls argument: Nate Silver seems kinda gay + ??? = Romney landslide!” A veritable industry sprung up on Fox News and elsewhere arguing that not only Silver but everybody except Romney’s private pollsters were twisting the evidence to favor President Obama.

Why anybody would sacrifice his own professional reputation to give false confidence to a favored candidate’s supporters was never explained.

Meanwhile, like Romney himself, Fox News viewers long conditioned to mistrust any source of information that’s not explicitly conservative took to “Mittmentum” as readily as the sheep in Orwell’s “Animal Farm” chanting “Four legs good, two legs bad!”

Even “mainstream” TV networks attracted to a “cliffhanger” narrative for commercial reasons downplayed what state-by-state numbers kept making clear: Close national tracking polls mainly reflected that Romney had big leads in the South, but trailed almost everywhere else.

Comments


Reader Poll

Were you impacted by last week's flooding?

Yes, but only inconvenienced by closed streets
Yes, water got close, but everything worked out OK
Yes, I had to evacuate my home or workplace
Yes, my house sustained extensive damage
No, I managed to avoid it all