Don't pay attention to polls!
The only one that matters is the election!
I like the CPC so stop hurting our chances by looking at these polls!
Whatever your excuse was before the election, you can be rest assured that it was verifiably wrong.
How the polls and the projections did
ThreeHundredEight.com
The 2015 federal election was a success for the polling industry, with the results of the election within the margins of error for most of the pollsters. The results were certainly better than in 2011, when the polls were not pointing to a Conservative majority government. The polls in this campaign did not seem to be pointing towards a Liberal majority government either, but that was because the seat projections were bamboozled by a growing and changing Liberal voting base.
So let's get down to it.
There was a late surge for the Liberals that pushed them over the top, but some of the polls that had older data (even only a few days old) were not able to capture the wave that pushed them from between 35% and 38% to the 39.5% the party actually got. For that reason, the vote projection was also lagging a little bit. Nevertheless, it still painted an accurate picture of what was going on, particularly when considering the likely ranges.
ThreeHundredEight.com: How the polls and the projections did
The only one that matters is the election!
I like the CPC so stop hurting our chances by looking at these polls!
Whatever your excuse was before the election, you can be rest assured that it was verifiably wrong.
How the polls and the projections did
ThreeHundredEight.com
The 2015 federal election was a success for the polling industry, with the results of the election within the margins of error for most of the pollsters. The results were certainly better than in 2011, when the polls were not pointing to a Conservative majority government. The polls in this campaign did not seem to be pointing towards a Liberal majority government either, but that was because the seat projections were bamboozled by a growing and changing Liberal voting base.
So let's get down to it.
There was a late surge for the Liberals that pushed them over the top, but some of the polls that had older data (even only a few days old) were not able to capture the wave that pushed them from between 35% and 38% to the 39.5% the party actually got. For that reason, the vote projection was also lagging a little bit. Nevertheless, it still painted an accurate picture of what was going on, particularly when considering the likely ranges.
ThreeHundredEight.com: How the polls and the projections did