From Straw Poll to Opinion Poll
The history of modern opinion polling from the 1930s onwards.
Today, we can鈥檛 imagine an election without an opinion poll gauging public opinion on who鈥檚 leading, who鈥檚 won a debate or who鈥檚 more popular with a specific group of voters. Even our favourite chocolate bars and footballers are subject to a poll. But how did straw polls evolve into the scientific number crunching we know now? What is their purpose and impact? How differently are they used around the world? And just how reliable are they?
Bridget Kendall is joined by economist and chairman of Gallup Pakistan Dr Ijaz Shafi Gilani; Scott Keeter, senior survey advisor for the Pew Research Center in Washington; and Sir John Curtice from the University of Strathclyde.
Picture: American President Harry S Truman smiles and waves to the excited Kansas City crowd after hearing the news that he had won the United States elections in 1948 and retained the Presidency, despite of what many polls had predicted, Credit: Keystone, Getty Images.
Last on
More episodes
Previous
Gauging Public Opinion
Polling found America's laws on same sex marriage moved inline with public opinion
Broadcasts
- Sat 5 Jan 2019 11:00大象传媒 Radio 4
- Sun 6 Jan 2019 20:00大象传媒 Radio 4