Ed Kilgore surveys a recent Washington Post/ABC poll with hard to interpret results and concludes:
Pollsters need to figure out ways to (a) test the Iraq issues actually facing Congress; (b) include in questions a few basic facts about troop withdrawals (i.e., that Bush is only talking about withdrawing "surged" troops) and funding levels (i.e., how much money buys what strategy); and (c) test some dynamic scenarios involding actions by Congress and reactions by Bush (i.e., a protracted funding fight).I don't think that's really right. Sometimes your measurements don't produce clear results because the measurement method isn't clear enough. Other times, though, they don't produce clear results because there's nothing to see clearly. Oftentimes in politics, I think politicians would like to believe that there's an extremely clear-cut median voter view about some difficult issue, because then they can all go adopt that view, and come what may they'll say they were doing what they had to do because of public opinion. But realistically if the public's answers to ABC's questions about Iraq are incoherent, that's probably because the key "swing" group of people actually has fuzzy, somewhat incoherent thoughts about Iraq. Under the circumstances, what politicians ought to do is:
Until that happens, new polls on Iraq will provide grist for spin, but not for any honest assessment of where the public is at present.
- Figure out what they think is the correct Iraq policy.
- Figure out what they think is the most persuasive way to sell that policy to the public.
- Pray it works.
This article available online at:
http://www.theatlantic.com/politics/archive/2007/10/polling-on-iraq/46531/
