President Barack Obama, with his daughter Malia, waves toward the crowd at his reelection night party on Nov. 7, 2012, in Chicago. (AP Photo/Charles Rex Arbogast)
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WASHINGTON --
Summing up the lessons learned from a massive investment in data and
technology, Obama campaign manager Jim Messina has a blunt messagefor pollsters: "We spent a whole
bunch of time figuring out that American polling is broken."
At
a Politico forum on Monday, Messina spoke about the
campaign's "three looks at the electorate" that gave him a deeper
understanding of "how we were doing, where we were doing it, where we were
moving -- which is why I knew that most of the public polls you were seeing
were completely ridiculous."
David Simas, the Obama campaign's director of opinion research,
provided The Huffington Post with more details about those three sources of
polling data:
• Battleground
Polls. The Obama campaign never conducted a nationwide survey.
For a broad overview of public opinion, it relied on lead pollster Joel
Benenson to survey
voters across 11 battleground states (Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan,
Nevada, New Hampshire, North Carolina, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and
Wisconsin) at regular intervals throughout the campaign.
Benenson conducted the aggregated battleground polls once every
three weeks during the spring and early summer of 2012, every other week during
the late summer, and twice a week for the final two months of the campaign.
These surveys were used to test messages and to glean overall strategic
guidance, but not to make individual state assessments.
• State
Tracking Polls. To gauge the battleground states, the campaign
conducted state-specific tracking polls on a similar schedule, shifting to
three-day rolling-average tracking in each state after Labor Day, with sample
sizes ranging between 500 and 900 likely voters every three days. The surveys
were conducted by a team of Democratic pollsters: John Anzalone, Sergio
Bendixen (among Latino
voters), Cornell Belcher, Diane Feldman, Lisa
Grove and Paul
Harstad. These surveys helped drive message testing and strategy but
also tracked the standings of Obama and Mitt Romney in each state.
• Analytics.
Overseen by its internal analytics staff, the campaign also conducted parallel
surveys in each state to help create and refine its microtargeting models and
to provide far more granular analysis of voter subgroups. These surveys used
live interviewers, very large sample sizes and very short questionnaires, which
focused on vote preference and strength of support, with no more than a handful
of additional substantive questions. During September and October, the campaign
completed 8,000 to 9,000 such calls per night.
The call centers that completed these analytics surveys typically specialize in
"voter identification," the process of contacting most or all
individual voters in a state to identify supporters who can then be targeted in
subsequent "get out the vote" efforts. But the Obama campaign's
approach to voter targeting was different. It called very largerandom samples of voters to develop statistical
models that generated scores applied to all voters, which
were then used for get-out-the-vote and persuasion targeting.
The Obama campaign preferred such modeling over traditional
brute-force voter ID calling, according to a member of the analytics staff,
"because our support models more efficiently (and quite accurately) told
us who supported us and who opposed us."
The
analytics staff also routinely combined all of their data sources -- Benenson's
aggregate battleground survey, the state tracking polls, the analytical calls
and even public polling data -- into a predictive model to estimate support for
Obama and Romney in each state and media market. Their model had much in common
with those created by Nate
Silver for The New
York Times and by Simon Jackman for HuffPost Pollster. It controlled for
the "house effects" of each pollster or data collection method, and
each nightly run of the model involved approximately 66,000"Monte
Carlo" simulations (a
number frequently cited by Messina and
others in recent weeks), which allowed the campaign to calculate its chances of
winning each state.
The massive scope of its polling effort helped guide the Obama
campaign in ways that would be impossible with conventional polling. In late
October, for example, its tracking detected a roughly 5 percentage point drop
in support for Obama in the Green Bay, Wis., media market. A typical tracking
survey in a market that size might have only 100 interviews (with a margin of
error of +/- 10 percentage points), but the Obama campaign had far more data at
its disposal. "Because we were conducting close to 600 interviews in the
market every three days," Simas explained, "we had confidence in the
market-level decision making."
The internal polling and modeling also told the Obama campaign a
different story about voter trends than that emerging from the public polls.
Simas said that from April through the conventions, the race was
"fixed" in the battleground states at a 3-to-4 point margin (50
percent for Obama, 46 or 47 percent for Romney). There was "a bit of
erosion for Romney right after the [Democratic convention] and in the midst of
the 47 percent video period" in mid to late September, during which
Obama's advantage expanded to roughly 6 points (50 percent to 44 percent),
Simas said.
Within 48 hours after the first presidential debate in early
October, those voters returned to Romney and the race "settled back"
into the same 3-to-4 point lead for Obama across the 11 battleground states
that the campaign's polling had shown all along. "Our final projection was
for a 51-48 battleground-state margin for the president, which is approximately
where the race ended up," Simas said.
The most recent results compiled by HuffPost Pollster for the 11
battleground states show Obama leading Romney by a 3.6 point margin (51.1
percent to 47.5 percent), although many provisional ballots have yet to be
counted and only two of the states has produced final certified results so far.
National public polls showed
bigger shifts toward Obama in September and back to Romney in early October.
They also indicated a late mini-surge to Obama that his campaign's internal
polling and models did not detect
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