Bush Index graphics
(best viewed in full-screen (F-11) mode)

(the good ol') Bush Index (Feb01 forward)


  Flush Bush -- Watch
as the Nation's Tolerance of Bush
Spirals Down,
and Down,
and Down. . .

Graphics:
Bush Approval Index, Feb01 - present
detail, Nov04 - present
Bush Disapproval Index, Oct01 - present
Bush App/DisappSpread Index, Oct01-present
detail, Nov04 - present

Gasoline UP, Bush DOWN -- see for yourself.
Bush Approval  and Gasoline Prices Jan01-present
second term only

20 Dec 05.  Almost overnight, thanks to a plug by Paul Krugman, the gas prices/approval relation I've been tracking (for over three years) jumped from backwater heresy to conventional wisdom.  I suppose that's gratifying, but I wish it had done a little time as the "Pollkatz Hypothesis" before going into the public domain. 
Anyway, thanks, Paul (no link -- it's in Times Select ($$$) (12/12/05))

26 Apr 06.  I guess I should at least spell out the Pollkatz Hypothesis.  The connection between gas prices and presidential approval is not (simply) that Bush is connected to Big Oil.  It's that the price of gasoline is just about the only Federal policy result non-wonks see and can relate to on a day-to-day basis.  Tax cuts?  Most people don't even know how much tax they pay.  War and defense?  Affects foreigners and National Guard families, not the rest of us.  But gasoline price displays, changing daily, hit people directly where they live.  And they blame Bush. 
7 Oct 06. Now and then somebody asks why I don't do some econometric hocus-pocus on these series.  Here's Brendan Nyhan's criticism of Doug Henwood's efforts in this direction; it's a fight I choose to stay out of.

Pollkatz graphics
(best viewed in full-screen (F-11) mode)

data charts, compiling most major "approval" polls:
Approval
Disapproval
Approval/Disapproval Spread

my calculations from poll data:
Approval Z-Scores
another version (by request)

other:
Nixon-Bush:  The Bad Leading the Worse
               Pollster Averages:  average difference from the
Ipsos benchmark.


MacBush!!  The Musical

old stuff
Rugged Individualists?  Bush States on the Federal Teat
Executive Orders:  Who's Using them More?
Abortion:  Always Legal? or Always Illegal?
Bill Clinton:  Approval, App-Disapp Spread Charts
(second term only)
This would be funny if it weren't so scary. 
(source:  pollingreport.com)
This account of Franken vs. Coulter made me remember
my 2002 contribution to the CoulterWatch genre.
(Here's the original "slannder" web site)

Election Prognostication Results: 
Pollkatz Historical Correlation Method Vindicated!!
(Final Pollkatz Projection; method explained at the end)

KiplingIf
Shakespeare:  "Friends, Romans, Countrymen. . . "
  (Julius Caesar, Act III, Scene ii)
ThucydidesFuneral Oration of Pericles


Disclaimer.  The webmaster is totally unconnected with, and was until recently blissfully unaware of, the "gentlemen's club" called Polekatz in Bridgeview Illinois.  Or any other such club, for that matter.

PROFESSOR POLLKATZ's
POOL OF POLLS
Proud Member of the Reality-Based Community
Some Links

Blogs:
AmericaBlog  (John Aravosis)
Atrios (Duncan Black)
Booman Tribune 
Daily Kos (c'mon, you know)
Digby
Donkey Rising (Ruy Teixeira)
FireDogLake 
James Walcott 
Josh Marshall   
LeftCoaster 
MaxSpeak (Max Sawicky)
myDD.com  
Perrspectives.com 
The Rude Pundit  (not for the squeamish)
ThinkProgress 
Tom Tomorrow 

Media Watchdogs:
The BAG (the news photo blog)
BusyBusyBusy.com  (watching columnists (yuk!)) 
ConWebWatch
Daily Howler  (Bob Somerby) 
Media Matters 
Media Whores Online R.I.P.
Presstitutes.com  (on hiatus) 

News Sources:
BuzzFlash
Democrats.com
Huffington Post 
The Nation 
Smirking Chimp
Salon.com ($ subscription)
Tapped (The American Prospect)

Data and Poll Sites:
PollingReport.com
Dave Leip's Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections 
Iraq Casualty Lists 
US EPA Retail Gasoline Price Data 
Rasmussen Daily Approval Ratings 
The Polling Critic 
World Public Opinion.org   
The Mystery Pollster  

Useful Information:
Fallout Shelter Kits & Plans 
Dean Baker,  The Conservative Nanny State 
(free e-book.  recommended!)
Bob Altemeyer, The Authoritarians  (or buy a printed copy here)
(Altemeyer is the sociologist extensively cited in John Dean's Conservatives Without Conscience)
Naomi Klein on Milton Friedman (transcript)   democracynow.org

Republican Family Values:  Rosters
T-Rex's Guide to Republican Family Values 
Sex and the Not-So-Single Republican  (Salon.com)

Funny:     
Mark Levine, Esq. explains Bush v. Gore 
Colbert at the Press Club Dinner  (4/29/06)
Poker with Dick 
The Comics Curmudgeon 
The Rocket Car:  a true story 

Time Wasters:
Pollkatz Banjo Page 

Wordle 
Free Tetris
Bejeweled 
Scrabble Blast 
Falling Sand 
Road Sign Math 

Great Freeware: 
Open Office 2.2  (open-source alternative to you-know-what)
IrfanView  (for viewing and editing pictures)
Audacity  (open-source sound and music editor)


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Rudimentary Statistics (2004)

Jeez.  How many times does this have to be explained? 

Blogger Trying to Grok offers this:

TtoG, quoting the L.A. Times:

"'Fifty-three percent of respondents said the situation in Iraq did not merit war, while 43 percent said war was justified. When the same question was asked for Times polls in March and November, the numbers were precisely reversed. . . The poll, which was conducted from Saturday to Tuesday, surveyed 1,230 registered voters nationwide. It had a margin of error of plus or minus three percentage points.'"

TtoG:

"The U.S. population is estimated at close to 300 million right now, and we're supposed to get worked up over what 1,230 people who are registered voters have to say? Hell, I only just registered yesterday, so I would've been ineligible. And if the margin of error is plus or minus 3%, and 53% of these 1,230 people thought war was not necessary, then perhaps only 615 people in the whole USA said this."

OK, kiddies, let's do this one more time:

First of all, Mr/Ms Trying, comparing the 300 million population with the number of registered voters is incorrect.  I don't know what the number of registered voters is, but figure:  just over 100 million voted in the 2000 election, and turnout was pretty good.  Ballpark it at 160-170 million R.V.s.

But that's not really important.  Flip a coin once, or ask a "yes-no" question of one poll respondent, call "heads" or "yes" 1 and the other thing zero, and you have defined a random variable, usually called a "Bernoulli trial."  At any given moment, a fixed (but unknown) proportion of American voters can answer "yes" to the poll question.  Call this proportion p.  If the pollster samples from the population at random, the probability that any individual pollee says "yes" is also pTo the pollster, p is unknown.  The standard deviation of a Bernoulli random variable, evaluated at the null hypothesis p = 0.5, is 0.5.  If you ask N people the same question, the percentage of "yes" answers gives an estimate of p; call it p^ (when possible, put the caret over the p).  This estimate is "unbiased," but I stress that "unbiased" is a statistical term of art unrelated to political or other everyday biases.  It also approximately obeys the normal distribution; the bigger the N, the better the approximation. 

The standard deviation of p^ is, still under the 50-50 null, 0.5/sqrt(N).  From this you can construct, for any chosen level of "confidence" or "statistical significance," a "confidence interval."  A 95% (for example) confidence interval is interpreted as saying:  If I went around repeating the experiment, each time asking the question of N people, the confidence intervals I calculated for each repetition would cover the true value of p 95% of the time.

For the 95% level, for the normal distribution, the "critical value" is about 1.96.  So, we are 95% confident that the interval

p^ +/- 1.96*0.5/sqrt(N)

covers the true p.

For p^ = 0.53 and N = 1230, this works out to

0.53 +/- 0.0279, i.e.  the interval (0.502, 0.558).

Thus, the sample data permits us to reject, at the 95% confidence level, the 50-50 null hypothesis in favor of the alternative, "a majority of registered voters now believes that the situation in Iraq does not merit war."  The LA Times also points out that these figures were reversed in November and March; assuming the sample sizes were similar, at those times we would have rejected the null in favor of the alternative "a majority of registered voters believes that the Iraq was was justified."

Even if all this is too technical for you, think about this.  Assuming the Times's pollsters followed the same methodology in November, March, and June, the shift of a statistically significant majority from supporting the war to opposing the war tells us something.  Even if you buy into the variations on the tune "how can 1200 sample respondents represent all the millions of voters in this great U.S. of A.!!!" (which is what I just tried to explain), the rapid change in the sentiment of pollees is informative, possibly importantly so, about the attitudes of a large number of voters.

People do, eventually, come to their senses.  Some say it's like a fever that must "run its course."  Ask Attorney General Palmer, Joe McCarthy, Lyndon Johnson.   As Honest Abe Lincoln said, "You can fool all of the people some of time, and a few hard-core Republicans all of the time, and 53% of the people once in a while."

(my thanks to Yoram Gat for helpful suggestions)


Footnotes  
16 Mar 06.  On the "approval" data graphics I combined CNN/Time (up through 2004) with Time (2004-present) into one symbol and discarded TIPP, which has not been published since 2004.
+++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++

Webmaster & Doppelganger for Professor Pollkatz:

Stuart Eugene Thiel  
Retired


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Poll data are the property of the pollsters. 
The format of the Middle-Earth map is property of the estate of J.R.R. Tolkien. 

All other content (c) 2001-2008 by Stuart Eugene Thiel.  All Rights Reserved.

Any Pollkatz graphic may be distributed by any means, royalty waived, provided:
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Those wishing to republish any Pollkatz graphics under other conditions, please contact me at 
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Stuart Eugene Thiel
November 8, 2008
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