Consumers of the National Election Study (NES) should be concerned if the survey has a bias that is increasing with time. A recent article by Barry Burden claims that for presidential elections, there is an increasing overreport bias, or turnout gap, between the NES turnout rate and the observed turnout rate caused by declining NES response rates. I show that the increasing turnout gap is an artifact of the universes these two turnout rates are based on. Reconciling the two universes shows no systematic increase of the reconciled turnout gap in presidential elections from 1948 to 2000, and furthermore demonstrates that the post-1976 rise in NES response rates (until 2000) is rewarded in a lower turnout gap. In addition, I offer another theo...
Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the repor...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Though the overreporting of voter turnout in the National Election Study (NES) is widely known, this...
Aggregate survey estimates of voter participation rates generally exceed actual voter turnout rates,...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Although polling accuracy increases throughout the election, polls are always at least a little wron...
In this empirical analysis of voting patterns in five countries on days when one or more national re...
Borrowing an approach from the literature on the economics of discrimination, we estimate the impact...
As most political scientists know, the outcome of the U.S. Presidential election can be predicted wi...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
Many democratic citizens habitually abstain from the political process, and the reasons for this abs...
We estimate a time series model of voter turnout for 34 US presidential elections, 1880–2012. Employ...
Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the repor...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...
Though the overreporting of voter turnout in the National Election Study (NES) is widely known, this...
Aggregate survey estimates of voter participation rates generally exceed actual voter turnout rates,...
Turnout bias is a classic flaw of postelection surveys. It has a double cause: overrepresentation of...
Although polling accuracy increases throughout the election, polls are always at least a little wron...
In this empirical analysis of voting patterns in five countries on days when one or more national re...
Borrowing an approach from the literature on the economics of discrimination, we estimate the impact...
As most political scientists know, the outcome of the U.S. Presidential election can be predicted wi...
Figures from postelection surveys often grossly overestimate election turnout. Two distinct phenomen...
Theory and evidence suggests that respondents are likely to overreport voter turnout in election sur...
How do marginal voters differ from regular voters? I develop a method for comparing the partisan pre...
Many democratic citizens habitually abstain from the political process, and the reasons for this abs...
We estimate a time series model of voter turnout for 34 US presidential elections, 1880–2012. Employ...
Researchers studying electoral participation often rely on post-election surveys. However, the repor...
Earlier studies on turnout bias in postelection surveys have focused on vote overreporting (measurem...
This short report exploits a unique opportunity to investigate the implications of response bias in ...