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Poll Asks: Should Governor Mark Sanford Resign?

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Should Governor Mark Sanford resign?  We want to know what the people think here at Elective Decisions.  When voting, consider whether this affair has any basis on his job as governor, or is it so reprehensible that his job just doesn’t matter?  Did he use taxpayer money during his rendezvous?  We ask.  You decide.

Written by electivedecisions

June 26, 2009 at 10:44 am

FOX News Becoming Anti-Obama Network

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New York—As the healthcare debate rages, FOX News continues to run stories that oppose Barack Obama and the White House’s position on a national healthcare.  Since ABC announced their incestuous relationship with the White House, FOX has been criticized by Obama for their attacks on him, his administration and their policies.

And now, FOX has run a story quoting GOP Chairman Michael Steele, and Rick Scott, chairman of Conservatives for Patients Rights.  The story—“Critics Attack ABC News for Refusing to Air Opposing Ads During Obama’s Health Care Special”—is just another in a long line of stories that have aired on FOX that take Obama to task.

“It is unfortunate—and unusual—that ABC is refusing to accept paid advertising that would present an alternative viewpoint for the White House health care program,” Rick Scott said in a statement, noting estimates that potential legislation costs at least $1 trillion of taxpayer money.”

It is exactly these kinds of stories—with reporters doing their job—that has the White House up in arms.  And in the White House’s point of view, FOX News might as well be broadcasting from Rush Limbaugh’s house.  It is exactly this kind of thought that has many the White House claiming that FOX News is the anti-Obama network.

Elective Decisions certainly appreciates it when reporters actually do their job instead of being political partisan hacks.  So we salute FOX News for doing just that.  Their job and nothing more.

To read the FOX News story, click the link below:

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2009/06/18/critics-attack-abc-news-refusing-air-opposing-ads-obamas-health-care-special/

Written by electivedecisions

June 18, 2009 at 10:40 am

Wall Street Journal Reports Public Wary Of Deficit

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Washington—A new Wall Street Journal/NBC poll shows that the public is growing wearing of the deficits and government intervention.  The current poll shows that 58% of Americans say that the president and Congress should focus on keeping the budget down, even if it takes longer for the economy to recover.

This result—fifty-eight percent—is  larger than the amount of Americans that actually voted for Obama.  So, despite his assumed mandate, Americans are getting tired of the incessant spending, and deficits that are running amuck.

However, far too many Americans still think that government is the solution to problems with 60% saying that Obama is working on so many issues because the country has so many problems.  And even more Americans still have no understanding of healthcare with three in four, saying that a public plan is quite important, despite the fact that they noted their employer would likely drop their current health plan.

What is clear here is that far too many people have no idea exactly what socialized medicine will get them, and how their individual care will be rationed and reduced.  Even worse, they have no concept of how much the plan will really cost, or how to go about paying for the plan.

One thing is clear.  Opposing Obama and healthcare needs to continue.

To read the entire Wall Street Journal article, click the link below:

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB124527518023424769.html

Written by electivedecisions

June 17, 2009 at 8:51 pm

North Korea Gives Obama The Finger

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In a report by the Los Angeles Times, North Korea said, “In a statement released by the Foreign Ministry, North Korea said it intended to weaponize its remaining stockpile of plutonium and to pursue uranium enrichment.”

This practically tells Obama and our current White House exactly where to go.  It really isn’t surprising that this is the case.  North Korea, and millions of Americans know that Obama isn’t up to the task to defending the United States of America.

Joe Biden said that “we would be tested,” and he’s correct.  From North Korea to Iran to Gaza, we’re being given the finger all across the globe, all because Obama is incompetent when it comes to foreign affair.  And worse of all, Israel knows they’re on their own.

This is just another example of why we need a change in Congress in 2010, and it can’t come fast enough.  Here is a link to the Los Angeles Times article below:

http://www.latimes.com/news/nationworld/world/la-fg-korea-nukes14-2009jun14,0,3744921.story

Written by electivedecisions

June 13, 2009 at 4:13 pm

New York Times Shocked That Felon Had A Gun

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Apparently, the New York Times is shocked to learn that a convicted felon, James W. von Brunn had a weapon.  They also appeared indignant to learn that the Federal Bureau of Investigation wasn’t looking into von Brunn.

The F.B.I., however, was aware that von Brunn had a website, that “expressed hatred of African Americans and Jews.”  And of course, prosecution for first degree murder isn’t good enough.  We need the hate crime prosecution.

And to top it all off, we find out that he double parked.  Of all the things to do.  It has to rank up there with murder and mayhem.

So, here’s the link if you can stomach reading the New York Times:

http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/12/us/12shoot.html

And a hint for the New York Times, he didn’t get his weapon at a gun show.

Written by electivedecisions

June 11, 2009 at 3:00 pm

Posted in Conservatism, News

Obama “Deeply Concerned” Over Sentencing Of Journalists

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Washintgon, D.C.–Now that the two journalists have been sentenced, President Obama has remarked that he’s “deeply concerned” over their sentencing by North Korea, and that the White House “is engaged in all possible channels to secure their release.”

Amnesty International also criticized the sentencing of the two journalists.  Roseann Rife, Amnesty International’s Asia-Pacific deputy director, said,  “No access to lawyers, no due process, no transparency: the North Korean judicial and penal systems are more instruments of suppression than of justice.”

To read more of the left’s outrage, click here:  http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/09/world/asia/09north.html?bl&ex=1244606400&en=4814daa952f4f797&ei=5087%0A

Where was Obama’s “deep concern” when terrorists were killing soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan?  Where was Amnesty International’s outrage as soldiers died?  Suddenly, two journalists are taken-journalists that have a leftist vantage point-and now there’s concern across the mainstream media.

Yet, none of the outrage was exhibited at Saddam Hussein when hundreds of thousands were butchered.  And one more question:  Where is Obama’s concern for the state of Israel?

I guess he’s only deeply concerened when it comes time to address the Muslim world.  The bottom line is that these people make me sick.  Their hypocricy and hatred for this country makes me want to throw up, but now they’re somehow concerned when one of their colleagues on the left are in harm’s way, but as far as Obama is concerned, he can tell Israel to bend over and kiss their butt goodbye.

Truly sickening!

Written by electivedecisions

June 8, 2009 at 5:28 pm

Where the Polls Went Wrong by John F. Stacks

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Reagan’s landslide challenges the pulse-taker profession

For weeks before the presidential election, the gurus of public opinion polling were nearly unanimous in their findings. In survey after survey, they agreed that the coming choice between President Jimmy Carter and Challenger Ronald Reagan was “too close to call.” A few points at most, they said, separated the two major contenders.

But when the votes were counted, the former California Governor had defeated Carter by a margin of 51% to 41% in the popular vote—a rout for a U.S. presidential race. In the electoral college, the Reagan victory was a 10-to-l avalanche that left the President holding only six states and the District of Columbia.

After being so right for so long about presidential elections—the pollsters’ findings had closely agreed with the voting results for most of the past 30 years—how could the surveys have been so wrong? The question is far more than technical. The spreading use of polls by the press and television has an important, if unmeasurable, effect on how voters perceive the candidates and the campaign, creating a kind of synergistic effect: the more a candidate rises in the polls, the more voters seem to take him seriously.

With such responsibilities thrust on them, the pollsters have a lot to answer for, and they know it. Their problems with the Carter-Reagan race have touched off the most skeptical examination of public opinion polling since 1948, when the surveyers made Thomas Dewey a sure winner over Harry Truman. In response, the experts have been explaining, qualifying, clarifying—and rationalizing. Simultaneously, they are privately embroiled in as much backbiting, mudslinging and mutual criticism as the tight-knit little profession has ever known. The public and private pollsters are criticizing their competition’s judgment, methodology, reliability and even honesty.

At the heart of the controversy is the fact that no published survey detected the Reagan landslide before it actually happened. Three weeks before the election, for example, TIME’S polling firm, Yankelovich, Skelly and White, produced a survey of 1,632 registered voters showing the race almost dead even, as did a private survey by Caddell. Two weeks later, a survey by CBS News and the New York Times showed about the same situation.

Some pollsters at that time, however, were getting results that showed a slight Reagan lead. ABC News-Harris surveys, for example, consistently gave Reagan a lead of a few points until the climactic last week of October.

The single exception to these general findings was the judgment drawn by the Reagan campaign’s own elaborate poll ing operation, run by Richard Wirthlin, who claims that Reagan had a consistent five-to seven-point lead throughout the last two weeks of the campaign.

Carter’s pollster, Patrick Caddell, on the other hand, still stands by his figures, which reflected a close race right up until the weekend before the election. On the Saturday before the election, four days after he had come off second best in the debate with Reagan, Carter was about even with Reagan, insists Caddell. But by Sunday night, he says, Carter’s campaign had collapsed. Caddell’s reason: the hostage issue was again in the news and again unsettled, thus reviving the public’s frustration with Carter as a whole. Caddell’s data shows Carter suddenly dropping five points behind by Sunday night, with another five-point collapse by Monday night.

The public opinion industry has christened Caddell’s thesis the “big bang” theory of the campaign: 8 million voters moving to Reagan in 48 hours. To a large extent, most public opinion researchers support this theory, although many do so with major qualifications.

Says TIME’S pollster Daniel Yankelovich: “There is every reason to assume that is what happened. When people are conflicted, they procrastinate. And that’s what they did in this election.”

Warren Mitofsky, director in charge of the polling effort run by CBS News and shared by the New York Times, has produced a new opinion survey that seems to substantiate the big bang theory. Re-interviewing 2,651 adults who had been questioned before the election, Mitofsky found that some 13% of the voters changed their minds in the last few days of the campaign and that Reagan got the lion’s share of the switchers. Says Mitofsky: “Caddell’s thesis is consistent with what CBS found.”

The Harris organization, which polled throughout the weekend and on Monday, showed Reagan gaining points right up to Election Day. By Monday night, according to Harris Executive Vice President David Neft, an unpublished Harris survey had Reagan six points ahead of Carter. Others picked up the trend too, and Wirthlin showed a widening gap through the weekend until Monday night when he, like Caddell, pegged the margin at about ten points in Reagan’s favor. The Gallup survey, which eleven days before the election had Carter ahead by three points, found Reagan moving from 42% to 44% to 47% in its final survey, taken on Nov. 1.

But although there is agreement on the fact that the gap widened at the end, no one except Caddell and Wirthlin came close to calling the margin. The Harris organization, which is claiming great credit for doing better than other public polls, was four points off Reagan’s actual voting percentage, the largest error factor it has ever had in a presidential election. Gallup not only also missed the winner’s voting percentage by four points but further erred by saying that Reagan was ahead by a margin of only three points. The margin was, says George Gallup, “a deviation greater than the average deviation of 2.3 percentage points for the 23 national elections covered by the Gallup poll.”

Everyone agrees that to some extent the Reagan margin over Carter grew in the last few days before the election. But they disagree over how much, when and why. Indeed, reading from the same computer printouts, CBS News and the NewYork Times disagree over how much impact the hostage crisis had; CBS News says not much, while the New York Times analysis says it “was a major element.”

Looking for explanations of what went wrong, Wirthlin believes that the other pollsters erred by estimating that there would be more Democrats in the final body of voters than there turned out to be. He also criticizes the others for asking the key presidential-choice question first instead of last, after asking about issues and impres sions of the candidates. This, he insists, produced a pro-Carter bias.

Mitofsky disagrees strenuously with the criticisms. Says he: “I can’t buy their approach to making es timates from data. I’m not prepared to throw out our techniques just because one poll produced a different number. In fact, if we were doing this all again, I would not change a single thing except to poll the last two days of the campaign. To believe their figures, too many other people have to be wrong.”

But Neft at Harris thinks Mitofsky’s post-election poll was wrong and was designed to explain away earlier numbers. Neft dismisses the notion that huge changes occurred at the last minute. Says he: “Nothing like that quantity and magnitude happened.” He explains the Harris four-point discrepancy by citing unex pectedly low turnout among Democrats on Election Day, a view shared by Gallup.

Two basic conclusions jump out of the unhappy experiences of the pollsters. First, most of the private surveyors stopped work too early to pick up the last-minute switches, whether the change was enormous, as most now believe, or whether, in Wirthlin’s phrase, “the mountain didn’t jump— it slid a little.” The reason that most private firms did not survey intensively right up until the last moment is simple: it would have cost too much.

The price of interviewing a single voter and then adding the data to the calculations is about $15. A major national survey usually contacts at least 1,500 people, running up a bill of about $22,500.

As it happened, only the candidates themselves were prepared to spend that kind of money time and again. Harris, for example, spent $350,000 on presidential polling from Labor Day on, whereas Caddell ran up bills of some $2 million. Wirthlin’s operation spent $1.3 million and surveyed 500 people every night of the fall campaign until the last few days, when it contacted 1,000 nightly. The findings were then calculated on a rolling, three-day average, which Wirthlin contends evened out the peaks and valleys that other pollsters perceived with their single-shot surveys. Wirthlin is frank enough to admit that he had a great advantage over the public pollsters. Says he: “Their major problem was the lack of resources and lack of continuity.”

In mid-October, the discrepancies between Wirthlin’s findings and those of the published surveys created a near panic in the Reagan camp. Under pressure from their colleagues, Wirthlin and his assistants spent a frantic three days reviewing their numbers and techniques. They decided they were right, but Caddell, for one, still believes that they had Reagan too far ahead too early.

The other lesson of the polling season was that the experts have by no means perfected the questions or the techniques that enable them to predict how undecided or unhappy voters will go on Election Day.

One puzzling phenomenon that the pollsters have not been able to cope with, or even explain thoroughly, is the so-called closet Reaganite. For whatever reason, people clearly voted for Reagan in this election who had said they would not.

Everett Ladd, director of the University of Connecticut’s Social Science Data Center, says flatly: “I am 100% certain that there was no ‘closet Reaganism’ in this election.” Other pollsters tend to agree. But there is some evidence that suggests otherwise. Before the election, only 7% of the blacks surveyed by New York Times-CBS News said they were going to vote for Reagan; Election Day exit polling showed that 14% had ac tually cast their ballots for the Californian. But when re-polled by New York Times-CBS News, only 6% of blacks admitted they had voted for Reagan.

If the pollsters are united on one point, it is that they are not solely to blame for misleading the public; the fault must be shared with the press, they say, which has never fully understood the limitations of surveying.

Says Cuff Zukin, poll director of the Eagleton Institute of Politics: “We are overconsumed with predicting what will happen. Polls predicting who is going to win the election are worthless. First, they can be very inaccurate at the time of the election be cause they are only accurate at the time they are taken.

They do not predict the future.” Agrees Marquette University Sociologist Wayne Youngquist: “The media want the pollsters to be seers. We want them to do more than they can.”

Negative voting, large numbers of undecideds, low turnout — all these factors made polling this year more difficult. Says Caddell: “This is the first election in which the voters didn’t really like either candidate much.”

Says Ladd: “We need a different methodology of election polling that takes into account the vastly greater flexibility that in the long-term sense characterizes the electorate. We know something breaking at the last minute — and it doesn’t have to be something very big— can change results. We shouldn’t pay too much attention to the earlier polls.”

Yankelovich points out that polls can produce numbers reflecting very firmly held, nearly unchangeable opinions, and can at the same time record views that are “mushy.” Along with TIME, he is at work on a new technique that will show which figures are “hard” and which are “soft.”

Admits Yankelovich: “Our greatest fail ure was to not point out more clearly that the implications of our data were that great movement could occur.”

In the end, as Yankelovich suggests, the main fault of the pollsters in a volatile year was that they did not view their own findings with enough skepticism — and drive the point home much more forcefully.

This story was written December 1, 1980, and is eerily similar to today.  To get a printable version, visit Time Magazine at http://www.time.com/time/printout/0,8816,924541,00.html

Written by electivedecisions

November 3, 2008 at 9:27 pm

Protestors Blame Frank For Crisis

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WESTPORT – About 15 protesters called for the resignation of U.S. Rep. Barney Frank Friday, saying he is responsible for the recent crisis in the financial markets that required a $700 billion government bailout.

The protesters claimed Frank supported regulations that forced banks to make risky mortgages to low-income families who could not afford to own homes, leading to foreclosures and the failure of financial institutions.

“He was pushing loans to people who could not pay them back. It was social engineering. He wanted to get low income people into homes,” said Linda Rapoza of Fall River, a member of the Republican State Committee.

Some of the protesters were supporters of Earl Henry Sholley of Norfolk, a Republican running against Frank.

“A large volume of money was loans given out to people who could not afford them,” said David Rose, another Fall River member of the Republican State Committee. They and others also said that, as chairman of the financial services committee, Frank failed to prevent institutions like Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac from getting into trouble.

To read more about how Barney Frank, D-MA, messed it all up, follow the magic link:

http://www.thesunchronicle.com/articles/2008/10/18/news/3812552.txt

Written by electivedecisions

October 18, 2008 at 9:57 pm

Posted in News

US Rep Frank Warns Banks Not To Hoard Funds From Treasury

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WASHINGTON (DOW JONES)–U.S. House Financial Services Chairman Barney Frank, D-Mass., warned banks that he believes it is unacceptable for them to hoard funds from the Treasury recapitalization program rather than using the funds to jump-start lending.

Frank was responding to reports that Bank of America Corp. (BAC) plans to use capital it would get from the U.S. Treasury as a financial cushion.

“That’s not why they’re getting that money,” Frank said in an interview with Dow Jones Newswires on Friday.

Follow the link to find more of the story of Democrats threatening the banking industry:

http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/djf500/200810171913DOWJONESDJONLINE000762_FORTUNE5.htm

Written by electivedecisions

October 17, 2008 at 8:09 pm