I assure you, political professionals believe exit polls. What do you think they were wrong about? They are implemented for the purpose of looking at the demographics of voting and to get an idea as to what was important to people. You have absolutely no evidence that there are "...LOTS of 'team Brown' that may not admit to voting for Trump."AZGrizFan wrote: Oh, NOW you’re going to believe exit polls?![]()
They were wrong about everything else, but somehow right about this? Trust me, there are LOTS of “team Brown” that may not want to admit to voting for Trump, but they did. And there’s lots who may not want to admit supporting him, but they DO.
And this thing about this "secret" thing where people don't want to admit supporting Trump but do is also completely unsupported. What happened in the election was not inconsistent with the polling. The polling said that Clinton would win the popular vote and she did. The polling said that the Electoral College was too close to call and it was.
The exit polling results, in terms of how racial groups view Trump, were very consistent with other polling both before and after the election. And the same basic picture is in place now.
Also, it's interesting to me that people claimed that Trump did well among Hispanics because the exit polling showed that he did slightly better among Hispanics than Romney did. But then when you point out that he did poorer than average among Hispanics for a Republican historically looking at exit polls going back through 1976 all of a sudden exit polling isn't reliable.
Exit polling IS reliable with respect to its purpose. And I assure you both of the two major political parties know it.










