Great points, Alkatt, especially your reference to 2020.
Someone else mentioned that, in August, Quinnipiac explicitly acknowledged that it was altering its turnout model to show much heavier Republican participation and slightly less participation by Democrats. In other words, they were going forward with a model that closely resembled 2…
Great points, Alkatt, especially your reference to 2020.
Someone else mentioned that, in August, Quinnipiac explicitly acknowledged that it was altering its turnout model to show much heavier Republican participation and slightly less participation by Democrats. In other words, they were going forward with a model that closely resembled 2020 turnout.
After Democrats over-performing polls in the midterms and in just about every post-Dobbs election & special election, I would argue that Quinnipiac is making a highly questionable choice.
Great points, Alkatt, especially your reference to 2020.
Someone else mentioned that, in August, Quinnipiac explicitly acknowledged that it was altering its turnout model to show much heavier Republican participation and slightly less participation by Democrats. In other words, they were going forward with a model that closely resembled 2020 turnout.
After Democrats over-performing polls in the midterms and in just about every post-Dobbs election & special election, I would argue that Quinnipiac is making a highly questionable choice.