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  1. Roy Morgan has scarpered it seems, David Farrar withdrew from Colin James “poll of polls” before the 2017 General Election, and there are not enough polls still standing or conduced frequently enough, to even have a “poll of polls” anymore. The “Trend” was how differing polls were accommodated, ever more uncomfortably it has to be said, in recent times.

    After 30 years of neo liberal psychology penetrating (and atomising, as academics used to say) the population, there are now so many micro demographics and niches liable to do anything. Precariat, generation rent, well off boomers, struggling boomers, millennials, Xers, newish migrants, and on and on.

    From a class analysis, NZ has a large underclass–thank you Roger ’n’ Ruth…, thousands of low paid workers, a taxpayer supported middle class via WFF and Accom. Supplements, a sizeable petit bourgeois of self employed, franchises and SMEs, and still a provincial urban divide–much complexity in a small population.

    So yes the polls are up against it alright.

  2. Great analysis, Chris! I think the message for the polling companies is never to do a poll at nearly exactly the same time as their rivals. They have inadvertently exposed the limitations of their craft.
    Colmar Brunton and Reid Research need to look after each other’s interests by agreeing to have at least a month between polls so any sudden shifts can be explained by some intervening event or another… however flimsy the explanation that might be.

  3. who care if we have two different polls the ones common theme in the two polls say soimon is extremely unpopular

  4. Word has it that those Schrodinger’s Cat boxes increasingly contain quite grumpy Raccoons that attack your face, yet this considerable health and safety hazard is routinely ignored by the Cattery Committee.

  5. I lied to a Curia phone poll about 6 months ago, but just for fun as I’ve always thought Curia a bit politically suspect.

    I’m flabbergasted to learn that I am now a ‘rat-fucker’.

    I won’t do it again. I always thought that only men were rats, and in the autumn of my life I am having to face the fact that women can also be rats, and that apparently I am one of them. Oh lordy.

    Still think Simon the best of a bad bunch – except for Maggie Barry – let Maggie loose with some rusty hedge-clippers and a basket for all the chopped-off heads – and another basketfull of abortion leaflets from
    nrly-Rev Simon O’Connor- and see what the pollsters make of all that.

    1. I always lie to polls, giving the opposite of my real view and I encourage everyone to do the same. They’re all invalid nonsense with their self important sounding ‘margin of errors’ and it’s fun to bugger them as someone called Jim once said. ( I once did my own poll – random sample of 5 people with a margin of error of 98 % )

  6. The reality is that Kiwis trust our political process less than ever, and trust pollsters even less than that.
    The polls have become just another form of marketing, and brand formation with little relevance to what the electorate actually thinks, other than being a demented sales pitch.

    We all know the pollsters have political bias and that the questions are rigged. We have no real interest in the results of polls, or at least less of an interest in the polls than the latest gossip about some random rugby hero’s girlfriend or boy toy.
    Sure the right is prepared to spend millions on right leaning pollsters. After all it’s a tax write-off isn’t it. And the left’s contribution to the pollster nonsense is a much tinier spend, relying more on the grapevine than upon branded marketing.
    People remember the left with favour, after all the only times the people of this country have faired marginally better is under a Labour Government. But fair minded kiwis give National the chance, repeatedly, to build the better future that is promised but never delivered. Then revert back to Labour when it all becomes way too hard because families need to be fed to survive.

    Branding, polling, sloganeering, badmouthing, and other marketing nonsense are the tools of slick used car salespersons, politicians, and advertising executives that in today’s age are trusted about as much as the nasty perverted relative that we all despise.

    Perhaps polling peoples dogs and cats by laying out different coloured bowls of food would provide more honest, and consistent results.

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