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Wednesday, June 20, 2007

The Stone Poll construct and operational methodology

The "Stone Poll Organization" is currently under fire for what appears to be unethical practices. This unqualified observation hit the media full force over the past couple days (6-19-07) and really took on a life of its own. This media current observation was first documented by this researcher as far back as 2001.

Please acess the following links to get an understanding of my position and observations.

"Xx" 2002 Election polling link

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/talkback/readpost.asp?artid=17014&item=39899


Jamaica Observer
By: Mark Wignall
"Anxious moments for Stone poll watchers"

Talk Back comments by Xx

Post 3 of 49
Posted by:
X(x)
Posted on:
Wednesday, November 14, 2001 at 11:11:41 PM
Location:
Normal, USA
Occupation:
Research
Comments:

"As far as the JLP is concerned, they have sewn up the next elections. With Seaga constantly harping on the 15 per cent points ahead of the PNP as, he believes, it is cast in stone".

Mark you are caught up in an illusion to print "15% points", this is misleading, your most recent Mcpoll (9/01) shows a false positive lead of 8-9 points for the JLP.

Mark your columns are a dishonest attempt at electioneering via skewed opinion polls, and subliminal columns to re-inforce your non-scientific assertions.

PREDICTION.The results of your next poll will show the JLP again leading, they will lead the PNP by approximately 6% to 10% points. The 50% uncommitted will decrease to approximately 40-48%. Raw % will be approximately JLP 29% to 35%; PNP 21% to 29%. Dont be confused by the possible combinations and how they add up my premise is; [any combination of these scores as long as N=100% and the percentage lead for the JLP falls between 6% and 10%.] Your margin of error will be appx. <>+.90 correlation. The results will not be surprising as the real motive is to manipulate the minds of the Jamaican people in favour of your party, so you can't afford to show the PNP leading because of the uncertain election date and the fear of momentum, so from here to election the JLP will lead 6-10 points and Mark will continue to subliminally try to feed us this regurgitated non-scientific garbage called opinion polls diguised as election crystal ball.

Mark you are going to be shocked to learn that the PNP will get 5 votes to every 3 for the JLP in the next general election. We can debate the validity after the election.


2002 Election results

http://www.jamaicaelections.com/election2002/news/20021017-1.html

PNP wins 4th term 10-seat margin of victoryBy Lloyd Williams, Senior Associate Editor
THE PEOPLE'S National Party (PNP) set public opinion poll forecasts awry yesterday by clawing a close victory in the 2002 General Election, getting an unprecedented fourth term as Government.
It crept to victory by taking an estimated 35 of the 60 seats in the House of Representatives. The Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) lost one of the 12 seats it had but grabbed another 14.


“Xx” 2007 Election polling cyber link:

http://www.golocaljamaica.com/cgi-bin/yabb/YaBB.pl?num=1158282768;start=all


http://www.sunheraldjamaica.com/coverstory1.htm

Stone Polls dumped
Gorstew shelves findings showing PNP ahead of JLP
The failure by Gorstew, a company owned by billionaire hotelier and publisher, Gordon “Butch” Stewart, to publish its own public opinion polls showing the ruling People’s National Party (PNP) ahead of the Opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), has fuel the perception that Stewart and his newspaper, the Jamaica Observer, have adopted an anti government posture.
Reports are that a decision has been taken to suspend the Stone Polls indefinitely.
“We have some concerns with the polls, as the findings were leaked before they were handed over to us and we are assessing the situation before deciding if we are going to publish the results,” said Chris Zacca, deputy chairman of the board of directors of the Jamaica Observer, on Friday.
Zacca blamed persons with vested interests of attempting to politicise a “business decision”.
Up to Friday, grave uncertainty hung over the future of the once revered Stone Polls, founded by late university professor, Carl Stone. Its general manager, former Gleaner editor-in-chief, Wyvolyn Gager, has quit her post and sources indicate that other members of the team, including Professor Ian Boxill, academician Lloyd Waller, Laurence Powell, Arlene Daly and Roy Russell, had written their resignation letters.
Gager, however, told the Sunday Herald that her resignation had nothing to do with the controversy.
“My contract actually ended in March and I decided that I would not continue,” she said, adding that she stayed on only to clear up some unfinished business.
But according to sources, Gager decided to quit after she was told that a decision was taken to commission Don Anderson of Market Research Services Limited (MRSL) to conduct public opinion polls for publication in the Observer, when no explanation was given for the non-publication of the polls done by her team.
It seemed that decision coincided with the falling out between Gorstew and the Stone team. ‘Business decision’The Stone team’s leading pollster, Dr. Ian Boxill, told the Sunday Herald that his team went into the field between late May and early June. The first part of the results was handed in two weeks ago and the second part last Thursday.
“We are not aware of any problems. We submitted the data and we were not told that it would not be published,” Dr. Boxill said on Thursday.
But Zacca said the results were on the streets shortly after they were handed over, “and we have problems with that”.
“This is a business decision. It is not making any money,” Zacca said, responding to questions over the future of the Stone Polls, following the decision to hire Anderson’s team of pollsters.It was not clear if members of the Stone team were directly told of the decision to hire another pollster. But Zacca said, “We have been publishing” the results of a poll done by Anderson’s team, which was done over the same period of the rejected Stone Poll findings.
Although Zacca did not point to anyone as having been responsible for the alleged leak of the poll results, which sources said had the PNP leading the JLP by eight percentage points, he argued that not only was there a confidentiality problem, but also he had difficulty publishing information which was in the hands of his competitors.
However, Zacca did not explain if he would have taken a similar position if the results of the polls had the opposition ahead. Cemented viewOnce a staunch supporter of the PNP, Stewart’s recent sentiments towards a change of government are well known. And speculations that the Observer was singing his tune gained momentum following the publication of a front-page photograph of Prime Minister Portia Simpson Miller doodling in Parliament during debate on the controversial Trafigura affair last year.
Several cartoons ridiculing the Prime Minister since then, in addition to statements critical of the government’s handling of the economy, have cemented the view among some supporters of the government that the paper was supporting the opposition.
“It is unfair to the Observer,” Zacca said on Friday, pointing to the Anderson polls showing the government ahead of the opposition in several areas as evidence that the Observer was not biased.
“If we got the polls we would have published them,” argued Desmond Allen, the publication’s executive editor in charge of operations. Allen said his editorial team had no input in the decision to commission the polls and the paper was only a vehicle for its publication. But he had “lots of concerns” that the non-publication could feed into the perception in some quarters, that the paper was biased against the government. MotivesAs the political temperature heats up ahead of the General Elections later this year, publication of the Stone Polls by the Observer was widely anticipated last week. This was after earlier publication of the Bill Johnson Polls in the Gleaner showed the PNP five points ahead of the JLP and the Don Anderson Polls showing both parties in a statistical dead heat, and Observer columnist, Mark Wignall’s, poll showing the JLP ahead by seven points.
Stewart’s company, Gorstew, acquired the once respectable Stone Polls a year ago from Stone’s widow, Rosemarie, for an undisclosed sum, raising eyebrows in political circles about Stewart’s motives.
It is felt in political circles that Stewart is still upset with the government for its decision to take back Air Jamaica from his AJAS Group and subsequent controversy over the joint venture Sandals Whitehouse Hotel. Stewart scolded the JLP and demanded its leader Bruce Golding to reprimand Member of Parliament Andrew Gallimore when Gallimore criticised AJAS’s handling of Air Jamaica in Parliament.
Stewart’s critics say he is part of a wider “big capital agenda” to push the government from power. Those supporting that view pointed to Friday’s advertisement in the Financial Gleaner by John Mahfood, urging businessmen to peg their donations to political parties to a request for a written strategy for a reduction in murders to “no more than 10 per 100,000 of population during the following five years of their tenure.”
ROPER'S PERSPECTIVE by Garnett Roper


http://www.sunheraldjamaica.com/editorial2.htm

Kingmakers of polls and pollsters
In the Ancient Near East, the period out of which the Old Testament Scriptures came, dreams were an important mechanism of prognosticating the future. The forces of power and empire believed that if they knew what a dream meant, they would thwart the adverse effect of that dream on their interest. They very often recruited the interpreters of dreams and made them a part of their royal courts. This is why Joseph in the book of Genesis was engaged by Pharaoh of Egypt, and Daniel in the book that bears his name was recruited or, put indelicately, was captured by Emperor Nebuchadnezzar, the King of Babylon.
What kings and emperors did in an age long gone by with dreams and interpreters of dreams, kingmakers are seeking to do with polls and pollsters today.
In this respect, in the lead-up to the 2007 General Elections, powerful media and private sector interests have acquired not merely the rights to publish polls, but the rights over the actual public opinion polls. The Gleaner has acquired the Bill Johnson Polls and to its enormous credit, has published those polls dispassionately and completely. The interests connected with CVM TV acquired the Don Anderson Polls and had been making them available to the viewing public.
The Observer acquired the Stone Polls and bought the Stone name as well. One gathers that when the most recent poll results were made available to those with controlling interest in the Observer newspaper, it was deemed that the results meant the polls were unreliable.
The Stone Polls seemed not to have told the Observer bigwigs what they wanted to hear, and so the results have so far not been published.
As a counter measure, the Observer interests acquired the Don Anderson Polls from the CVM Group and has begun to publish the Don Anderson Polls. What is remarkable is that all three polls have lined up within the margin of error. The Bill Johnson Polls found a month ago that the PNP under the watch of Portia Simpson Miller, had a lead of 7 per cent over the JLP.
The Stone Polls that the Observer seems disinclined to publish, because it is ostensibly unreliable, has found that the PNP enjoys a 6 percentage point lead over the JLP, and the Anderson Poll, with typically conservatism, has found that the PNP enjoys a 4 percentage lead over the JLP.Tools for manipulationWatchers would have noticed from a month ago, desperate signs of an intention to use the public opinion polls as a tool for the manipulation of the voting public. After the Bill Johnson Polls that showed the PNP enjoying a 7 percentage point lead over the JLP was published by the Gleaner, an Observer headline screamed about a Wignall Poll giving the JLP the same 7 percentage point lead over the PNP.
The trouble with that is that though Mark Wignall has been around polls, he has never studied polling. At least one is unsure whether they taught polling at Kingston College when he was a student there.
What is worse, Mark Wignall has not made any of his poll samples available; one suspects because he has none. One gathers to be fair and blunt, that the Observer interest has also refused to publish any further Wignall Polls on the basis that they are unreliable.
The acquisition of the Stone name and refusal to publish its findings by the Observer has begun to do damage, not just to that poll organisation, but also to the credibility of polls themselves. One suspects that may well be the intention. First there was a yet unsuccessful attempt to rename the Anderson Poll, the Stone-Anderson Poll. Then there is the resignation of a highly placed member of the Stone team in protest against the damage done to the professional reputation of its operatives by the decision of the Observer not to publish the findings. It is likely that other members of the team will also hand in their resignations. This will mean the dismantling of the Stone polling organisation and what survives will have lost any shred of credibility.Shoot the messengerIf one may return for the sake of record, to the practices of despotic kings in the Ancient Near East, now being taken up by would be kingmakers, there was a shoot the messenger approach by those who sought control over the future. It was not uncommon for kings and emperors who did not like the interpretation or lack thereof of dreamers, to put them all to death.
There is a story in the Old Testament book of Kings of the prophet by the name of Micaiah ben Imlah. Ahab the King of Israel wanted assurance of victory in order to proceed on a certain military expedition. All the prophets who wanted to curry favor with Ahab, gave him the requisite assurance. Micaiah ben Imlah promised him certain defeat. In response to which Ahab had Micaiah arrested and gave him a diet of bread and water for the period of his indefinite incarceration. The independence and courage of Micaiah ensured that integrity prophecy survived even though Micaiah himself did not.
Where do the machinations of the Observer leave all of us? One notes with interest that some of the same players who are behind the Observer, who have engineered what appears to be the ruination of the Stone Polls, are engaged in a war of words with the Minister of Development and PNP General Secretary, Donald Buchanan.
Interestingly, the burden of their arguments is to defend the credibility of claims they have made and to demand that they are not treated as a part of a political campaign. They want the freedom to express their opinion, but to deny the PNP General Secretary the same right to his opinion. They think they can do and say anything they want and plead innocence when others respond in kind.
The comments by Mr. Gazan Azan about ‘socialist government’ must certainly have been a mis-statement on his part. He is a far more sensible man than that statement suggests. On the other hand, Mr. Christopher Zacca cannot play so many roles and feign innocence at one and the same time. He is the president of the PSOJ, an office that must be compromised by his role in rejecting the Stone Poll in the service of narrowly partisan objectives. He is also the deputy chairman of the Observer. The event that was organised, to which Danny Buchanan responded, was arranged entirely for purposes that were party political in nature.CasualtiesThe first casualty of this entire saga is the credibility of the Observer: This incident now makes it clear that the Observer is now undoubtedly a part of the political campaign. It will do anything that is required to help its chosen side along. Signs of this abound, but in this refusal to publish an opinion poll that did not say what it wanted to hear, the chickens have come home to roost.
The second casualty is that unless the elections are called in July, the voters will be without a credible opinion poll. The credibility of public opinion polls will not survive if the elections are delayed until October. The Bill Johnson Polls have so far been operating above the fray, thanks to the lessons that the Gleaner has learnt over the years.
But Bill Johnson is not without his problems elsewhere. And I am not talking about St Lucia alone. If the Anderson Polls stay with the Observer, its credibility will be shot, because we will know that it can only survive if it tells the Observer interests what they want to hear.
How will this affect the practice of our democracy? It will be the same as it was before polling became such a feature of our elections. The elections will be decided on Election Day by the people. The boardrooms and lunchrooms will not be able to manipulate the Jamaican people. It is not lost on the people of this country that some of those who appear ruthlessly bitter and are squealing the loudest about the country, have benefited the most from the last two decades of political actions.
Some of these persons have made enormous fortunes. As one man puts it, some were born and grown in the 1990’s; before the 90’s they were never heard of or heard from. These who have gained so much and have given so little back, expect the people to listen to them as they tell the people what is in Jamaica’s interests. The Jamaican people have always been savvy to them. They have not been fooled by politicians; they will not be fooled by those who want to take them back to the great houses of the plantation. Those who have access to the minds of the people by virtue of their possession of the means of information, have a solemn trust. They must not allow themselves to be hostages of vested interests, but must seek to serve and protect the public interest.

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20070617t200000-0500_124433_obs_____these_polls_are_no_longer_of_news_value_to_us__.asp

'...These polls are no longer of news value to us'
Monday, June 18, 2007

Following is the full text of the statement issued yesterday by Gorstew, Gordon 'Butch' Stewart's holding company which owns the Stone Polling Organisation:
Gorstew, Gordon 'Butch' Stewart's holding company which owns the Stone Polling Organisation, has listened keenly to the self-serving and nonsensical claims that the recent Stone Poll results were being dumped for political reasons.We are very disturbed that the poll results had been leaked to the street and the media, even before they were submitted to the owners, who commissioned the poll.
It is our belief that the poll results are now of no news value to us, since the entire country is now aware of themWe also regret that the private circumstances surrounding the operation and future direction of the Stone Poll organisation are now being politicised.
We take strong objection to this and reject any comments made which seek to discredit our intentions as owners of the Stone poll, and caution members of any political party against the dangers of politicising private business matters.
When Gorstew bought the Stone Poll, our intention was, and still is, to restore the poll's, and the late Carl Stone's, reputation and so we mandated the consultants in charge to bring creativity, simplicity and innovation to the ailing organisation.
The sequence of events surrounding the recent polls are as follows:
. Gorstew gave instructions and paid for a political party status poll to be conducted by the Stone team, who are contracted on a poll by poll basis. As owners, we reviewed and approved the questions which were to be asked.
. The Jamaica Observer, intent on preserving its credibility and further cementing its position as the Country's leading newspaper, conceptualized the establishment of the paper as the leading publisher of polls, by adding the Don Anderson Polls.. The Observer management contracted Mr Anderson in mid May 2007, to conduct a similar political party status poll with the view that both polls would be published, although not simultaneously.
. However, following Mr Anderson's engagements with the Observer, prior to the results of either poll, the Stone Poll's lead consultant Ms Wyvolyn Gager, resigned on June 5, 2007, stating that the engagement of another polling organisation to conduct a similar poll, signaled a lack of confidence in the Stone team. We regret Ms Gager's decision to resign as she is held in the highest regard and we were confident in her leadership of the Stone Team.
. Mr Anderson's team went into the field in late May. . Although the Stone team went out into the field before the Anderson team, the Anderson results were submitted to us ahead of the Stone results. Stone team cited rain as the cause of their delay and informed us that they had to send their team in the field.
. At no time did Gorstew representatives give any instructions for pollsters to go back into the field for whatever reason. . The Anderson poll results were first submitted to the Observer on June 7, 2007 and subsequently published June 13th, 14th and 15th.
. The Stone poll first results were submitted to Gorstew on the evening of June 8, 2007, and have not yet been published.. On June 11, 2007 it was discovered, through statements via the media, that there was a breach of confidentiality, prior to publication, of the results of the Stone Poll.
. It is our position that with the breach of confidentiality and the resignation of Ms. Gager, the Stone organisation is in need of a complete review and restructuring, and this was communicated to Dr Ian Boxill on June 12, 2007. At that time, it was also communicated to Dr Boxill that given this need for restructuring, we would no longer be requiring his services or those of his team.The issues surrounding the current state of the Stone poll organization and the Jamaica Observer's decision to engage the independent pollster, Don Anderson, are as we have set them out above, and are in no way politically motivated.
It is also our view that given the fact that the Anderson poll had shown the ruling People's National Party (PNP) ahead of the opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), it is non-sensical to argue that the Stone Poll results are being held back, because they showed the PNP ahead of the JLP.


http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20070617t200000-0500_124435_obs_nonsense__.asp

Nonsense!Claims Stone Polls results dumped for political reasons self-serving, says Gorstew
by Desmond Allen Executive Editor - OperationsMonday, June 18, 2007

Gorstew, Gordon 'Butch' Stewart's holding company which owns the Stone Polling Organisation, yesterday described as "self-serving" and "nonsensical", claims that the recent poll results were being dumped for political reasons.
In a statement responding to the claims, Gorstew said the poll results had been leaked to the street and the media, even before it had reached the owners who commissioned it."It is our belief that the poll results are now of no news value to us, since the entire country is now aware of them," the statement said, and expressed regret that "the private circumstances surrounding the operation and future direction of the Stone Polling organisation are now being politicised".
"We take strong objection to this and reject any comments made which seek to discredit our intentions as owners of the Stone Polls and we caution members of any political party against the dangers of politicising private business matters," Gorstew said. That comment was in apparent reference to suggestions by some PNP officials that politics was behind Gorstew's decision to reject the Stone Poll results.
The statement also confirmed that lead consultant on the Stone team, Wyvolyn Gager had resigned over the Observer's decision to commission another pollster, Don Anderson.Anderson was first hired to carry out market surveys for the Observer and then asked to do political polls as well, after a decision by the newspaper to establish itself as the leading publishers of poll in Jamaica.
Gager, a former Gleaner editor-in-chief, saw the move to bring in Anderson as a lack of confidence in the Stone team and sent in her resignation. But Gorstew emphasised that she was was held the highest regard and "we were confident in her leadership of the Stone Team".
In the statement, Gorstew also insisted that given the fact that the Anderson poll had shown the ruling People's National Party (PNP) ahead of the opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP), it was non-sensical to argue that the Stone polls were being held back, because they showed the PNP ahead of the JLP.The Don Anderson Polls published over three days last week, showed the PNP ahead of the JLP by four percentage points and the PNP leader, Portia Simpson Miller getting more favourable rating over Opposition Leader, Bruce Golding.
"It is our position that with the breach of confidentiality and the resignation of Ms Gager, the Stone Organisation is in need of a complete review and restructuring, and this was communicated to Dr Ian Boxill on June 12, 2007," Gorstew said.
"At that time, it was also communicated to Dr Boxill that given this need for restructuring, we would no longer be requiring his services or those of his team." See full text of Gorstew statement on this page.

************

Thanks for your interest, and please keep it clean and focused. My general intent is to discuss Research in general and specifically research designs, methodologies, checks and balances or the lack thereof as it relates to social and political science research.

Congratulations to the JLP on executing an effective public relation strategy, regardless of the 'questionable research procedural ethics' exhibited by what appears to be parties with vested interest.

12 comments:

X-1 said...

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20070621T190000-0500_124555_OBS_FORMER_STONE_POLL_TEAM_RESPONDS_.asp

Former Stone Poll team responds


Friday, June 22, 2007



The team of academics who, until recently, worked as members of the Stone Poll Organisation, yesterday reaffirmed their commitment to conducting research in a professional manner, saying that to do otherwise would affect their reputation and integrity, both individually and collectively.


Prof Ian Boxhill, former Stone Poll team leader
In a press release to the Observer, the team, led by Professor Ian Boxill, also explained their working relationship with Gorstew, the owners of the Stone Poll Organisation, and maintained that at no time was there any discussion between them and Gorstew about a breach of confidentiality relating to the polls conducted last month.
Following is the full text of their statement.

"In the latter half of 2006, members of the former Stone Poll Team were approached to conduct polls for Gorstew Limited, the owners of the Stone Poll Organisation, with the expectation that the results would be published in the Observer newspaper.

The team was assembled because of the expertise and the integrity of the members. The members of the team were Professor Ian Boxill (Polling Team Leader), Mr Roy Russell (Statistician), Dr Lawrence Powell (Questionnaire Constructor), Ms Arlene Bailey (Data Manager) and Dr Lloyd Waller (Field Manager). All of the members of the team are full-time academics with many years of research experience.
Led by its manager, Ms Wyvolyn Gager, and its technical head, Professor Ian Boxill, the team conducted three polls in 2006 and one in May/June 2007 on behalf of the Organisation. The conduct of the polls was successful in each case and the results were submitted to the owners of Stone Organisation.

In May 2007, as in the previous three polls of 2006, the team acted professionally and ethically both in its conduct of the poll and in the submission of the results to the owners of the Stone Poll Organisation.
The team conducted polls only when requests were made by the owners.

Regarding the issue of termination of the working relationship of the team with the Stone Poll Organisation, it is (also) important to point out that the Team was hired on an ad hoc basis to conduct each poll. During the course of these events, the Stone Team maintained an excellent working relationship with the owners of the poll.

In a meeting with the owners of the Stone Poll Organisation, the leader of the Team was advised that the polls would be suspended due to business considerations. At no time in our meetings, discussions and e-mail communications was there mention by the owners of the Stone Poll Organisation that a breach of confidentiality had taken place by members of the Team.

As academic researchers, we find it necessary to reaffirm our commitment to freedom of inquiry, and to conducting research which is of the highest quality - objective, transparent and consistent with the professional ethics associated with social science research. This is very important as to do otherwise would affect our reputation and integrity both individually and collectively.

We are thankful for the opportunity to make a contribution to our nation, and we hope that our example will inspire others to continue to uphold the integrity and proud tradition of polling as pioneered by the late Professor Carl Stone."
**********

Very interesting, shall we presume that the Stone team will reconstitute at a different home base,perhapsthe Herald? in order to reclaim their 'reputation and credibility. We shall see.

X-1 said...

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/letters/html/20070622T200000-0500_124572_OBS_WIGNALL__STOP_THE_VILIFICATION_OF_THE_PM.asp

Wignall, stop the vilification of the PM

Saturday, June 23, 2007

Dear Editor,

This is an open letter to columnist Mark Wignall in response to his column of June 10, "Portia losing it bad. and fast".
Mark, you need to grow up and stop this continuous sniping and bad-mouthing of the prime minister. You are engaging in the same kind of nastiness by others that was evident during the run-up to her taking over the leadership of the party.

You have personalised the unrelenting attacks on Portia to such an extent that it has crossed the bounds of professionalism and decorum, and calls into question your judgement. You are a self-proclaimed top-notch pollster.
However, the manner in which you have conducted yourself on this matter demonstrates your inability to reason dispassionately. It seems that ego and emotions always replace objectivity.

Recently, you reported that the prime minister offended you grievously by questioning the integrity of your recent polling effort. You saw red and indicated that your response was the hardening of your position against the PNP. That is an understatement. Now you are in the middle of the PNP issues in St Ann, not because you care a hoot about the participants, some of whom you vilified previously, but simply to try to shame Portia and the PNP, and also further the cause of the JLP.

In my humble opinion, you are operating in the fog of partisan opinion writing mixed in with partisan polling which leads to discredited results. Perhaps you need to take a page from the book of respected pollster Bill Johnson and learn the basics about how to separate personal animus and bias from the conduct of the art (science) of opinion polling.

I am really offended that the management of the Observer has allowed you the latitude to spew such diatribes on a continuing basis. It is very likely that they share your philosophy and seek the same political outcomes.

Aldred Ricketts
Seattle, Washington
USA
aldred.ricketts@gmail.com

X-1 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
X-1 said...
This comment has been removed by the author.
X-1 said...

Poll-itics!
published: Sunday | June 24, 2007


Orville Taylor, Contributor

In Jamaica, when we are killing a bull, we 'poll' it. The problem is the bull is being released now, in the political silly season, and the truth is becoming as rare a commodity as a piece of bone in a can of bully beef.

Inasmuch as Bruce made a Golding promise of it, Chris Tufton it, Karl Samudafy it, Delroy Chuck it, and Daryl believes that he has a Vaz lead on his opponent, the surveys indicate that the People's National Party (PNP) is leading. The Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) is ringing the bell, its sign of victory, but the PNP's sign is 'a head'.

Based on all the opinions surveys the PNP is smelling victory and given the momentum, the donnette is so far ahead that her party cannot be touched even with a long 'poll'. The pollster, for whom The Gleaner foots the 'Bill,' says the PNP has a decent lead. Anderson, the Don, who misread our popularity but was accurate in the 2002 election, says the comrades have a four per cent lead. It is uncertain what are the results of the last survey from the oldest polling entity because rumours are that they are sealed in 'Stone'.

Speculation

This Heralded speculation that they were suppressed because they showed an eight per cent PNP lead, which was disturbing to their anti-PNP owners. However, the defence was that they were leaked into the public domain and perhaps, to a rival publication. As a result, they lost their economic impact and were shelved. Puzzling, because, despite the close location of my offices to all five of the researchers, none had the courtesy of 'pripping me' they all know that I am trustworthy. In fact, even up to Friday, the team leader revealed as much detail about the findings as his namesake outlined regarding his vision for Jamaican football. In any event, despite the purported leak, we still don't know what the data say.

Furthermore, if the public would have lost interest in one poll result, would one, done concurrently, coincidentally, showing a smaller and negligible lead, be more engaging?

While one can forgive the errant journalist who makes inferences that do not stand up to scientific rigour, the academic is expected to have the highest standard of truth and accuracy of all public thinkers.

Trained and employed in the same faculty that produced the most accurate polls in the history of the western hemisphere, I often take great pride at international conferences when my graduate students impress. Furthermore, undergraduate students of the Department of Sociology, Psychology and Social Work at the University of the West Indies, have far greater research and data analysis skills than the majority of their peers in the American Sociological Association (ASA). For that reason, if the Stone Poll team headed by a former Gleaner editor-in-chief, but comprising almost exclusively UWI social scientists, is inaccurate, they are to be beaten with many stripes.

The confidentiality breach argument is as difficult to swallow as meaty, 'Gory stew' to a vegetarian. The only leaks that exist are in that story. Let's do a poll to see if the public believes it.

Then, in defence of his master, Desmond 'leads the Opposition' against 'Dezman'. Obviously, cognisant that members of his own organisation are associated with employees in other media houses, he should know if there was a really a breach and perhaps the source.

Nonetheless, polls apart, I can 'Audley' agree that it is a disgrace that the PNP is still in power for almost 20 years as it has negative implications for democracy. Given the bungling, scandals and faux pas of the present administration, the hapless JLP should have capitalised and be leading.

Despite all of the successes of the PNP in housing, the reduction of nominal unemployment and the cellphone blitz, its performance in crime and education has been unimpressive. This is a major failure given the direct relationship between education, on the one hand, and the involvement of our youth in violent crimes, on the other. This is so simple that onewonders what happened during the 18 years.

X-1 said...

Cliff Hughes, Emily Crooks get death threats


Friday, July 13, 2007



Death threats have been made against the lives of journalists Cliff Hughes and Emily Crooks after Hughes' Nationwide News Network reported the results of opinion polls showing the Opposition Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) with a "constituency by constituency" lead over the ruling People's National Party (PNP).

Yesterday, Hughes admitted to the Observer that he was aware of the threats but declined to speak on the issue, offering only that he had written to the commissioner of police, who has responded to his satisfaction. However, reliable Observer sources say that orders were issued from a South St Andrew community with fierce loyalties to the PNP for Hughes and Crooks to be shot dead.

The polls broadcast by Nationwide last month angered the PNP hierarchy to the point where they suggested that they would take legal action against Nationwide on the basis that the polls were "fictitious".

The claim that the polls were mythical was made by the PNP's campaign director Dr Paul Robertson. However, his statement contradicted that of PNP general-secretary Donald Buchanan, who said that the polls were stale.

Buchanan, who is also the information minister and outgoing member of parliament for North-West St Elizabeth, told the Observer on June 29 that the poll results were arrived at as far back as October, November and December last year.

"What I have heard are results of polls we had commissioned prior to the selection of candidates between October and December last year when we were polling for the process of the selection contest," Buchanan said. "What they have aired relates to nothing we have done since the start of this year."

He said the PNP had commissioned no polls which would have led to the kind of findings aired, and added that the news report by Nationwide suggested that there was new information and new poll findings.

Buchanan also insisted that the poll results were not consistent with any electoral tracking the PNP was doing or had done in recent times.

The polls were allegedly done by pollster Bill Johnson. But Johnson, who conducts polls for the PNP and the Gleaner, also denied that he had done any such constituency polls. He told Radio Jamaica on June 29 that the results read to him contained information and findings which he had not done. He also said the action was a deliberate plot to discredit him.

At a PNP rally in Lacovia, North-West St Elizabeth on June 28, Buchanan blasted Nationwide for airing the polls.
"I say shame upon you, Nationwide, shame upon you Nationwide, you should know better than that. It would appear to me that you are losing your intellectual integrity, Nationwide, you better come back on track if you want to have any credibility in Jamaica," he shouted from the platform.

"If you want to know the facts, pick up your telephone and call me like you call me about other things and I will talk to you and give you the facts," he said. "But don't come with your lies and your stale polls to try and confuse the people of Jamaica because the Jamaican people cannot be confused, not by you and not by anybody else. I say shame upon you Nationwide."

Since then, Hughes and his team - who have stood by their publication of the polls - have been labelled anti-PNP, and last Thursday, according to our sources, a threat was made to firebomb the building from which Nationwide operates.

"Last Thursday, a lady called the switchboard and asked for Cliff and Emily," our source said. "When she was told that neither of them were there, she said, 'It better unno leave the building because we ah go firebomb it'."

The anger in the PNP over the publication of the polls has also resulted in the ruling party not placing any of its commercials on Nationwide.

The ads started running on radio and television last week. However, party insiders say that the decision to block Nationwide has angered some members of the PNP who have described it as stupid.

X-1 said...

Pollster says election outcome hinges on campaign strategies of parties
ALICIA DUNKLEY, Observer staff reporter
Friday, July 06, 2007

POLLSTER Don Anderson has said that the outcome of the next general elections could depend heavily on the play-off between the groundwork being done by the Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) in constituencies and the 'Portia factor' which has held sway in the campaigning strategy of the ruling People's National Party (PNP).
"The question to a larger effect is perhaps the 'Portia factor' in the constituencies versus the groundwork the JLP has done in the constituences, but to me based on everything I have seen the elections are likely to be close," Anderson told a luncheon meeting of the Lions Club of Kingston at the Jamaica Pegasus Hotel on Wednesday.
Noting that his firm Market Research Services Limited has conducted four national polls for 2007, Anderson said a trend was now beginning to emerge.
"We are now beginning to see a trend. In my estimation the election is going to be a close election because the constituency by constituency emphasis has never been greater," he said.
According to Anderson, the latest polls which were made public on CVM Television's Direct "is beginning to help shape projections for the likely outcome of the elections".
Anderson said polls done between the last week of May and the first week of June for the first time in seven months showed a widening gap, with the PNP moving four percentage points upward and the JLP remaining at 25 percent.
"Every pollster wants to have a fairly long time period of information and the last poll certainly is helping us to formulate a position as to how the elections will go," he noted.
He said, however, that he was far from ready to make a direct pronouncement as his research team will be conducting two more polls in the time leading up to the elections.
"I have four polls now but I'm still not happy that I have enough data on which to make a really reliable projection as to the outcome of the next election. The information is trending in a certain direction and when we do the next two we believe we will have substantive material that we can say how the elections are likely to go," Anderson said.
The first Anderson-led polls in February of this year showed the JLP enjoying a one per cent lead over the PNP, but a May poll showed that popular support for the parties was 25 per cent each, effectively locking each party in a statistical dead heat. Another poll in June showed the PNP breaking away from the JLP with a four-point lead.
But Anderson sounded a note of caution on the number of "uncommitted voters" which in February stood at 49 per cent.
According to the pollster, while this number "has narrowed down a bit it is still very high".
He said the uncommitted, which predominantly comprises the 18 to 35 age group, would prove the toughest challenge yet and could sway the outcome of the next general elections.

"The persons who are now 18 to 35 have grown up knowing nothing but a PNP Government; they have also grown up at a time when they have witnessed a certain amount of divisiveness and infighting from the Jamaica Labour Party especially for the leadership, and effectively what that has done is they may be disillusioned with the PNP but not enough to hold on to the JLP and you are finding that that group is cemented," he explained.
Classifying the cohort as "hardcore" and "difficult to budge" the pollster said they "could determine where the elections will head".
Meantime, Anderson said he was was not in support of pollsters conducting polls and then 'writing columns about their findings'.
"I believe this is wrong," he said.
He said it was essential that pollsters not allow their political persuasions to come out in the data they present.
"Present the data and let the chips fall where they may," Anderso

X-1 said...

I stand by my poll findings of a JLP lead

Mark Wignall
Sunday, June 17, 2007

With some poll findings conducted over the same period showing polls of varying results, and with talk of other unpublished findings, it is fitting, I believe, for me to reiterate that my poll done in May 2007 is one which I am prepared to stand by insofar as it relates to a JLP lead.

The methodologies of the other polling outfits are their own, and come election day, only one result will really matter… At the next elections it is still my belief that the JLP will be unseating the ruling PNP. Don't take my word for it. Just go out on voting day and do what you believe needs to be done.
-------

Silly poll question
published: Friday | July 13, 2007
The Editor, Sir:
I read Wednesday's poll with some bewilderment and am forced to question the motives of the media as they relate to this upcoming election.
What does it matter who the public would rather have dinner with or share a car ride with? I too would prefer to sit with Portia and eat or converse and I would be more comfortable begging her for the piece of meat she did not want. After all, she is Sista P.
If I were playing domino for money, I would want Bruce for a partner as he is a player of some note and if I needed a careful hunting partner, again Bruce would get the nod. If I wanted somebody to cook me a killer oxtail dinner, Portia would be my choice as I feel sure she is more capable in this respect but none of this addresses the problems with which the country is faced.
That said, I would ask (all Jamaicans) of the two candidates (Portia and Bruce:
Who would you trust to make the right choices and plot the course of your children and grandchildren's education?
Who would you choose to ensure that the intrinsic value of Jamaica is retained and the 20-year plus downhill slide is halted?

Who do you want representing you to the World Bank and the IMF and negotiating the terms of our foreign debt?

Popularity and personality are Portia's strong points, and I like the lady, but she needs to propose sensible and real solutions to Jamaica's problems. She has no real solutions, so that is a major problem for her campaign, and the media, instead of asking the hard and real questions, keep putting out this nonsense.

Please cancel next week's poll about which of the party leaders you would prefer to paint your toenails and change it to which prime ministerial candidate would make the greatest reduction in crime or who would put the most young people to work over the next three years.

Jamaica deserves to get the best candidate as their Prime Minister and it is the media's job to expose the truth and pertinent facts instead of promoting smoke and mirror-type fluff to confound and confuse.

I am, etc.,
STEPHEN F. SMITH
puttus@walla.com
Sunrise, Fl.
-------

Polls, politics and media
published: Monday | July 2, 2007

Stephen Vasciannie

There has been no shortage of discussions about political polls, and about the role of the media in partisan politics. Some people believe these issues are apt to produce yawns, but others disagree. The latter are correct - the interplay between polls and media influence in Jamaica throws up a number of important and interesting issues.

In the first place, we are now officially sceptical about all polls. This scepticism takes different forms, and reflects different degrees of analysis. Some commentators on the radio take their cue from Motty Perkins, but - in fairness - do not develop their arguments in the way Motty does. So, when the poll debate comes up, we can expect at least two talk-show hosts immediately to say "the polls are only a snapshot". They say very little or nothing beyond this, so we cannot know what significance they draw from the snapshot point.

SNAPSHOT, SO WHAT?
We can do better than that. The snapshot point is true, but the value of the snapshot will vary according to particular circumstances. So, for example, a snapshot taken just before a general election may provide a clear indication of likely results and thus serve as a guide to political action. But, of course, this depends on the quality of the snapshot. I believe that the media should encourage some of its analysts to develop the means of assessing the statistical quality of the polls that are put before us.

A political election poll is a sample, built on the assumption that the sample - properly drawn - can reflect the views of the population. In statistics, if the sample is drawn on a random basis, then the evaluator can assess the margin of error for the sample. This is done by our pollsters, and on this basis they tend to tell us that their polls have a margin of error of plus or minus three per cent. Is this really true? And how can we test it? We can test it by looking up the statistical tables: If you survey about 1,000 people as representative of a population of, say, 750,000 voters, what is the margin of error?

The pollster may say, however, that this is insufficient because (s)he is not really undertaking a purely random sample. As economist Wilberne Persaud reminded us in last week's Financial Gleaner, Carl Stone could probably have been vulnerable on this point. But Stone's response was that his sample was drawn on the basis of standard statistical techniques as well as on the basis of his extensive knowledge of the Jamaican political environment. Stone knew the statistical sweet spots - so he could say, for instance, that certain parts of certain constituencies served as weather vane, giving a good idea of which way the constituency and the country was swinging.

The challenge, therefore, is for Stone's heirs and successors to indicate how they determine the actual persons to be interviewed as representative of the population. Persaud calls on the pollsters to do this, and I support him.

ELECTION STRATEGY?
But the debate on polls has not really moved in this direction. On the contrary, in at least one case, questions have arisen about whether the pollsters are part of the election strategy of one side in the electoral race. And, in another case, two editors have publicly argued with each other about the reasons for non-publication of certain poll results. I am not in a position to draw firm conclusions on these issues, but one thing is clear: poll-taking, either as a political art or science, has seriously been weakened in the build-up to the next election.
Finally, the media houses should sharpen their sensitivity to the possibility of bias. Of course, it is their prerogative to be biased if they want to be, but sometimes they seem to go overboard without realising it. If a certain politician coughs, it is in the news as important, positive news, while, on the other hand, we hear precious little about the campaign activities of many others.

X-1 said...

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/news/html/20070907T000000-0500_127110_OBS_GOLDING_TAKES_OFFICE_TUESDAY.asp
____________

Golding takes office Tuesday
Official count shows JLP 33; PNP 27

Saturday, September 08, 2007



GOLDING. expected to name Cabinet by Wednesday
BRUCE Golding will next Tuesday take the oath as Jamaica's eighth prime minister at a swearing-in ceremony set for 4:00 pm at King's House, the Observer has learnt.
The swearing-in ceremony was set yesterday after the end of the official count of ballots in Monday's general elections showed Golding's Jamaica Labour Party (JLP) winning 33 seats to 27 for the People's National Party (PNP), which had been in Government since February 1989.

Governor-General Prof Kenneth Hall is today expected to announce plans for the inauguration ceremony.
The new prime minister should name his Cabinet by Wednesday, sources said yesterday.

Since the start of the official count of ballots on Tuesday, the Electoral Office of Jamaica (EOJ) has paid special attention to the five most closely contested seats - Eastern and Western Hanover, South Eastern St Mary, South St James and Central Manchester, following Monday night's 31-29 tally in favour of the Opposition JLP.

However, on Tuesday morning the preliminary count had the JLP at 32 seats and the PNP 28. The JLP picked up two seats in the official count - South East St Mary, which has been won by Tarn Peralto over the PNP's Harry Douglas; and Eastern Hanover, which went to JLP incumbent Barry Gray over veteran politician Dr D K Duncan, who served as a Cabinet minister in Michael Manley's Government of the 1970s.

However, the JLP lost the South St James seat, which was given to its candidate, Noel Donaldson, in the preliminary count over the PNP's Derrick Kellier, ending the official count at 33-27.

Returning officers are required to return all documents to the EOJ next week Friday, except in cases where magisterial recounts have been requested. On receiving the documents, the EOJ will gazette the names of the winners.

"If within the first four days of the seven-day period after the returning officer has declared a candidate elected, the candidate produces an affidavit of a witness stating that the returning officer made mistakes in the counting, a resident magistrate will recount all ballots," Danville Walker, the director of elections, said in a statement last night.

Added Walker: "If a returning officer receives notice of a magisterial recount, this will delay the return of all documents to the director of elections."

The seventh day from the final count for most constituencies is September 13. However, that will be extended for any constituency in which there is a magisterial recount, the EOJ said yesterday.







http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/html/20070906t000000-0500_127067_obs_congrats_to_jlp__pollsters_.asp

___________________

"Congrats to JLP, pollsters

Mark Wignall
Thursday, September 06, 2007



For about five years now I've held a theory that there is a connection between the impact of my writings and my polls. From previous research it is known that about 15 per cent of the voting age population reads newspaper columnists to varying degrees of regularity. In my own case, my writing is anything but sterile and drab. It is hard-hitting and some have even described it as vitriolic.

In the periods when my writing takes on a pro-PNP flavour, that percentage of the population who reads me and supports the PNP tends to consider me their friend. If my output turns to pro-JLP, among that 15 per cent who support the JLP are many who would be more than eager to talk of the glorious JLP and its wonders.

I began writing newspaper columns in 1993 when I wrote briefly for the Sunday Gleaner. I then wrote for the Sunday issue of the Herald and since 1996, the Observer. Up unto 1994, when I did polls under the Stone Team banner, I would lead one of the teams of interviewers. In that same year, while interviewing in Portland, I happened upon someone who recognised me and said, "I never miss yu column and a agree wid almos' everyt'ing yu sey." And of course the person wanted to talk for the whole afternoon.

At that time it dawned on me that if my writings were "nicer" and "sanitised" it would have no impact; neither on the newspaper reading public nor on the increased readership of the publication. Since that time I have tried to blend the raw feel of life at street level with that which could be absorbed by the thinking person. In that I believe I have succeeded to a large extent.

In my last few polls before the election, based on how the results have panned out, it is my belief that my popularity (or infamy) among the newspaper-reading public may have brought out responses which represented overzealousness on the part of JLP supporters and to a lesser extent, acrimony among those PNP supporters in the sample (especially in the more urban and educated households). Had I been able to measure the factor to which this played a part, I am in no doubt that I would have done much better than the extremely wide variance between my last polls and the actual.

Mind you, it is a theory and a sound one, I believe, not an escape clause for sloppy polling. The interviewers involved are all highly experienced in their craft and this ought to take away nothing from them. None of the other pollsters write a regular column and do so with the full frontal force as I do it.
In the end, I am forced to conclude that unless I begin to write about Sunday afternoon teas and the sex life of the cicada, I have to give up political polling. Congrats to the other pollsters and I hope they go on from strength to strength. Carl Stone would have been proud"

*******

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/columns/html/20070906T230000-0500_127102_OBS_WINNERS_AND_LOSERS_IN_THE_ELECTIONS.asp

____________

Winners and losers in the elections

Geof Brown
Friday, September 07, 2007



If you were up all night on Monday, election day, following the progress of the major political parties as the vote count rolled in, you experienced a roller coaster ride hard to describe to those who did not share it with you. For as one radio commentator put it, one could not afford to go to the bathroom.

At times it seemed the PNP was winning (to the great shock of many), at times it seemed that there was certainly going to be a 30/30 seat tie. Finally, it was the JLP ahead by the slim margin of two seats in a 31/29 split with the PNP. Only late in the night did it seem to settle tentatively at a JLP lead of 32/28. And those were the figures carried in the Tuesday morning headlines of the print media. Recounts have since changed the picture to a more definitive JLP lead of 33/27 at the time of this writing.

In the end, although the JLP has a clear majority of at least six seats in the 60-seat Parliament, the clearest victor is Jamaica. For it is the nation which will profit from having a narrow separation between political victor and political loser. This column, nevertheless, congratulates the JLP on its remarkable victory and especially congratulates Prime Minister-designate Bruce Golding, on what was one of the most statesmanlike victory speeches ever heard in this country. At the same time, it commends the PNP on a remarkable showing and strong challenge to the JLP as the opening section above dramatically conveys. As one radio talk show host put it, the PNP after over 18 years in power was defeated but not humiliated.

And all of the above is why this column claims that the clear winner is Jamaica. For the JLP cannot crow over its victory, and the PNP need not cry over its loss. Both parties have been put on notice that neither is to get smug. One will have to prove its worthiness under the watchfulness of the other. The result should be better governance as each of the two major parties seeks to vindicate its existence.
Bruce Golding in his victory speech to his party's supporters put it well when he said that perhaps the electorate designed the narrow victory to compel the two parties to cooperate in "constructive engagement". The true losers are those rabid one-track politically-blind party hacks for whom party is more important than country. They have little to brag about now.
There are true winners among the opinion pollsters.
Foremost among the three leading ones is that consummate professional Don Anderson. He accurately called a win for the JLP in the range of 32 to 36 seats. As this is written, there is still the possibility of 34 or 35 seats for the JLP on the final count. Pollster Bill Johnson is redeemed from his St Lucia gaffe as he also predicted quite accurately a swing away from the PNP in the last couple weeks of the campaign.
Professor Ian Boxhill, former head of the Carl Stone Poll, also called the results fairly accurately for those constituencies his team surveyed. The biggest loser is, of course, Mark Wignall. Somehow, he has managed once again to get his personal preferences mixed up in his "professional" polling. In his column of yesterday in this paper, he appears to have thrown in the towel and have finally stopped the pretence of being an independent and credible pollster.

And as Mark himself observed, Carl Stone would have been proud of those professional pollsters for it is they who have shown that opinion polling is a credible science. Sadly Carl Stone would be ashamed of his protégé, Wignall. Another surprising loser was my previously favourite radio talk show Nationwide on which I have appeared numerous times as a commentator. My favourite professionals, Cliff Hughes and Emily Crooks, so wore their hearts on their sleeves, that their objectivity was swamped by their obvious bias, calling their usual credibility into question. Journalists should reveal the truth. Unfortunately, the respected duo found themselves on the side of the great exaggerators, one of whom predicted a 44/16 split in favour of the JLP. I did not hear it myself but others in the public reported that Nationwide predicted a 51/9 split in favour of the JLP.

__________

I anticipate enormous fun and formidable challengers when I decide to memorialize all this in a book, which was an integral part of my strategy from the jump. Reason, this election was like no other, emotions, interest, games, investments, etc. etc were all hyped and so a book will find fertile interest in my judgment and especially since my theory have been validated on several fronts.

Oh the dice game? As stated, a dice or di "game". It was designed with a specific function to bring a counter balance to Wignall's skewed polling.


The name of the Book will be posted here first. As the book moves from concept to actual manuscript strategic updates will be posted on this blog, just keep checking in as the months go by.

Tactically, I will explore the following and similar options as viable publishing routes with varying degrees of viral marketing in cyberspace.

http://www.authorhouse.com/GetPublished/PrePublishing.aspx

http://www.iuniverse.com/

http://www.ehow.com/how_107987_self-publish-book.html

X-1 said...

Question:

Why was the Observer Archive redirected/deleted after this blog was published?

Possible Answer:

Hopefully not to deny access to verfy Xx theories that are allover the archive. No fear, copies are here and can be authentically replicated unlike Wignall's Polling.

__________________
"Xx" 2002 Election polling link

http://www.jamaicaobserver.com/talkback/readpost.asp?artid=17014&item=39899


Talk Back comments on 'Anxious moments for Stone poll watchers'
Post 3 of 49

Posted by:
X(x)
Posted on:
Wednesday, November 14, 2001 at 11:11:41 PM
Location:
Normal, USA
Occupation:
Research
Comments:

"As far as the JLP is concerned, they have sewn up the next elections. With Seaga constantly harping on the 15 per cent points ahead of the PNP as, he believes, it is cast in stone".

Mark you are caught up in an illusion to print "15% points", this is misleading, your most recent Mcpoll (9/01) shows a false positive lead of 8-9 points for the JLP.

Mark your columns are a dishonest attempt at electioneering via skewed opinion polls, and subliminal columns to re-inforce your non-scientific assertions.

PREDICTION.The results of your next poll will show the JLP again leading, they will lead the PNP by approximately 6% to 10% points. The 50% uncommitted will decrease to approximately 40-48%. Raw % will be approximately JLP 29% to 35%; PNP 21% to 29%. Dont be confused by the possible combinations and how they add up my premise is; [any combination of these scores as long as N=100% and the percentage lead for the JLP falls between 6% and 10%.] Your margin of error will be appx. <>+.90 correlation. The results will not be surprising as the real motive is to manipulate the minds of the Jamaican people in favour of your party, so you can't afford to show the PNP leading because of the uncertain election date and the fear of momentum, so from here to election the JLP will lead 6-10 points and Mark will continue to subliminally try to feed us this regurgitated non-scientific garbage called opinion polls diguised as election crystal ball.

Mark you are going to be shocked to learn that the PNP will get 5 votes to every 3 for the JLP in the next general election. We can debate the validity after the election"
_______________________

X-1 said...

The following are Original postings by "Xx" in the “Observer talkback forum” prior to the 2002 Election in response to Wignall’s polling. The forum archive was redirected/deleted by parties with vested interest. However, all posting in the talkback forum by “Xx” can be authentically replicated and validated.

Observer Archive Story Titled:??

{Posted by: X(x)
Posted on: Thursday, December 20, 2001 at 8:03:23 AM
Location: Normal, USA
Occupation: Research
Comments:
Wiggi, (Mark Wignall) this is comical. At least you have a healthy sense of humor.

Mark by your statements here:-

"Is it because I have a soft spot for the JLP and I am using the columns of the Observer to spout my personal propaganda? Is it because I have a vested interest in having the JLP win?"

{-one should be very skeptical of your polling results as if these strong biases are not controlled, then they have the potential of rending your results as being 'political' and not 'scientific'.

Based on your premise or mindset, your results are pre-ordained or otherwise your whole approach/MO would be counterproductive, Right Mark. e.g. Design and implement your hypothesis by delineating your subjective boundaries and obtaining data to back into your hypothesis. Very smart, a neophyte would not be adept at doing this so I give you some credit where research is concern Mark.

(MW) Please tell us that you are being facetious, as this statement is confirming what a lot of us already suspected; and, is this statement in conflict with principles of journalistic objectivity.

Without proper and scientifically proven approaches for controlling researcher bias/'participant observer bias' directly or indirectly your polling results are subject to spuracity. Tell us how you control these 'strong biases' against the PNP in your polling methodology next time around.



Observer Archive Story Title: ??

X(x)
Friday, February 15, 2002 at 5:23:13 AM
Normal, USA
Occupation, Research
Comments
When a scientist does not know the answer to a problem he is ignorant. When s/he has a hunch as to what the results is, he is uncertain; And when he is sure of what the results is going to be, he is in some doubt.

As far as the laws of mathematics refer to reality they are not certain, and as far as they are not certain, they do not refer to reality"

More polls will encourage more discussions; however a clear, reliable and valid scientific research will remain elusive. The upcoming Polls will not add clarity, as they are researchers in search of samples and samples in search of researchers.
The methodologies being employed are skewed with political bias and this reality accounts for some of the difference in the polls. Truly quasi-scientific at best. Trends may appear consistent, but so are horoscopes.

The sad lesson here is both polling organization should be operating in a purely objective scientific and unbiased environment, however this maybe an impossible expectation given the political culture.

*******



Scientific Legislation

Lester Ward: 1906”

“When people become so intelligent that they know how to choose as their representatives persons of decided ability , who know something of human nature, who recognize that there are social forces, and that their duty is to devise ways and means for scientifically controlling those forces on exactly the same principles that an experimenter or an inventor controls the forces of physical nature, then we may look for scientific legislation”.

X-1 said...

Scientific Legislation?

Lets put this on our national agenda, without controls our system/culture is susceptible to smart researchers using smart tools with the 'assurance' of being invisible to the "untrained" eye.