Mitt Romney bids farewell to the U.S. Senate, potentially marking the end of an era for Rockefeller Republicanism.
I feel like tearing off my clothes and dancing in the rain (snow on Tuesday). Ofc I'm entirely too old to do that. But...
We were SO right.
Here's Snoop, who rapped "F--K Donald Trump" in 2017, now performing at a Trump supporting inauguration party.
Watch Live 3:00 PM EST — Robert Barnes and Rich Baris discuss in detail bombshell results within the Public Polling Project for Early Spring 2021, and more civil unrest amid the trial of Derek Chauvin for the death of George Floyd.
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It's remarkable to watch many on the right act just like the left in response to bad poll numbers, even overwhelmingly bad numbers.
But it could make a great case study.
Nevertheless, it turns out political identification is not a demographic that immediately precludes you from being prone to self-delusion.
🧐 1. How big is this on the right vs. the left? We know it basically IS the left. It appears much smaller on the right given the polling vs. social media activity.
More interesting to me, however...
🧐 2. Maybe that's also part of the reason why political factions always have such a hard time course correcting? Does that "part" increase or decrease based on political identification, which we could answer if we answer "1".
Maybe Jack Snyder missed that part in his thesis.
Perhaps it's not just bureaucracy and parochial interests that make course corrections akin to the Titanic trying to avoid the iceberg. Those are undeniably primary obstacles to real change.
But could it...
Watching people attempt to "unskew" polls conducted by all walks of this industry—ranging from Nate Cohn at The New York Times to Spencer Kimball at Emerson College to Tim Malloy at Quinnipiac—all to deny Donald Trump's gains against Joe Biden with various voting blocs, is more than a little sad.
The slew of recent polls over two weeks—to include no less than four today alone—have simply confirmed prior findings published from other pollsters who have previously been "unskewed". That includes your's truly and our work at BIG DATA POLL, Mark Penn at Harvard University, Patrick Ruffini at Echelon Insights, and many others.
I'm temped to equate this with an Occam's razor-like situation. But this debate is more about likelihood than simplicity.
Here's the Presidential Vote Preference Trend for Biden v. Trump going back to August 2020. The Public Polling Project did not begin asking the Rematch Question for 2024 until September 2021. However, we can still make some pretty important and interesting observations.