And it looks like they’re gonna help Obama… but they’re not gonna save him.

Current polling in the 2008 presidential election shows a very tight race between Democrat Barack Obama and Republican John McCain. In part because of the strong support Obama is attracting among younger voters, and as the number of Americans who are reachable only by cell phones rises, interest continues to grow in the question of whether public opinion polls that do not include cell phones are accurately measuring the relative levels of support for the two candidates.

The Pew Research Center for the People & the Press has conducted three major election surveys with both cell phone and landline samples since the conclusion of the primaries. In each of the surveys, there were only small, and not statistically significant, differences between presidential horserace estimates based on the combined interviews and estimates based on the landline surveys only. Yet a virtually identical pattern is seen across all three surveys: In each case, including cell phone interviews resulted in slightly more support for Obama and slightly less for McCain, a consistent difference of two-to-three points in the margin.

Time to double your dosage of Cellexa.

Via Slog.

In addition to being a nationally syndicated sex advice columnist, the author of several books, and the host of the Savage Lovecast, Savage is “a deviant of the highest order” (Daily Caller)....

2 replies on “Pew Research Polls Cell Phone Users”

  1. not statistically significant = absolutely meaningless. As in, not worth the electrons it’s displayed by.

    Come on Dan (if that is really Dan Savage), you should know better than to post this tripe.

    BREAKING NEWS: Obama has a 75% approval rating among my grandparents! What does that mean for the election? Tune it at 11 to find out! (in the meantime, please enjoy some of this tripe)

Comments are closed.