'Who is real, and who isn't?' Pollsters struggle to measure huge 2020 field
The Democratic National Committee's debate criteria has put the spotlight on decisions about which candidates to include in surveys.
By STEVEN SHEPARD 03/11/2019 05:44 PM EDT
The logjam of nearly two dozen declared or likely Democratic presidential candidates is overwhelming public pollsters trying to measure the 2020 primary.
New surveys are cramming up to 23 Democrats into their questionnaires after the Democratic National Committee set a low, 1 percent polling threshold to gain admittance into the partys first primary debates. The miles-long list of candidates has created an unusual set of methodological challenges for pollsters already battling declining engagement with their surveys.
But pollsters say the criteria also put them in a no-win situation: A pollsters decision about whether to include a candidate or not could be a make-or-break choice for that campaign, especially the lesser-known and first-time White House hopefuls hoping to make the debate stage.
The main thing standing between a candidate registering 1 percent and 0 percent in any particular poll is each pollsters decision of whom to include, said Patrick Murray, the director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute. This places an undue editorial burden on public polling outfits.
There are 200 names who have filed for the Democratic presidential nomination. Were obviously not going to list them all, Murray added. The question is, who is real, and who isnt?
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https://www.politico.com/story/2019/03/11/2020-democrats-polls-1215620