HEY REPORTERS: What to know when interpreting polling on abortion over the next week - it'll be confusing🧵
1) After 100s of focus groups and scores of surveys on abortion - here's the bottom line rn. About 50% to 75% of adults support abortion rights and access. Among VOTERS, it's higher - about 60% to 75%. Why? They want people having control over these decisions, not the gov't.
2) What you know about opinion comes from very few polls: nyt, wapo, cnn, pew, gallup. These researchers are brilliant, but they only ask surface Qs on abortion. Mostly tracking Qs, which ironically, aren't the Qs to detect major shifts in opinion.
3) Also, these researchers are NOT doing focus groups / qual research - listening to people. So they aren't measuring MANY aspects of opinion on the issue. Here are just a few Qs we've asked - straight from the mouths of ordinary people.
4) The Q below is a no-no in polling - having two concepts in one Q. But we still asked it because it's how people think and talk.
5) As an aside, sometimes I think understanding opinion on abortion is this simple:
6) So, when reporters are only seeing a handful of questions, and the sources come from respected, smart researchers (asking limited Qs from limited views), they are likely to report things like this:
7) And be wrong. A few weeks after this story came out, I had an opportunity to ask this Q 👇(Also repeated it a few months ago - found 77% RV saying no)
8) Do people think abortion is a complex issue, based on each person's circumstances? Absolutely. Do most voters struggle with their position on abortion? They do not.
9) Of course we wouldn't know that - from images alone! (Screenshot from my phone last night). Let alone continuing the (inaccurate) narrative that the country is divided and the issue is polarizing
10) In fact, the country is not divided. Most support Roe, most support access. Most don't think about this issue until election time - because they don't hear about it until then. It's not polarizing. It's just that everyone *thinks* everyone thinks it's polarizing.
11) We're about to see a flurry of polling about Roe, 15 week bans, 6 week bans, etc. My guess is that 95% of these Qs will not ask a key follow-up Q that would entirely change our sense of opinion.....
12) Lemme demonstrate. From our recent poll of voters, we replicated a standard Gallup tracking Q that requires respondents to choose legal or illegal:
13) Then we asked a *follow up* of that 57% who responded "illegal:"
14) Here's what we found - just 38% remain in the illegal camp. 62% say legal or don't pass a law/stay out
15) Here's another example on 15 week bans (see what we learn when offering an explicit "don't know")
16) This is replicating a Marist / Knights of Columbus poll, which produced headlines claiming most Americans want substantial abortion restrictions:
17) When we asked a follow-up, we found a majority of respondents said they do NOT want politicians to pass new laws that reflect their response in previous question (!!). view.publitas.com/perryundem-res…
18) Another example of how these tracking polls get it wrong: Gallup finds forever the public is "divided" between "pro-choice" and "pro-life" people. But, actually, almost four in ten don't identify with either label (fun survey with @sarahkliff !!)
19) And another:
20) On a side note, what does this mean: "when the woman doesn't want the child for any reason"? And on a side note to a side note, chances are 99% that an older white man wrote this question in about 1973 and it's been asked ever since.
21) So... these data are confusing if you haven't been conducting qualitative research (which 99.9% of people have not!). Because when you listen to what people say, and measure those sentiments, it becomes much clearer - for most, it's about who has power over these decisions.
22) But if you rely only on a handful of survey Qs, you may understandably come to @Nate_Cohn's (inaccurate) conclusion:
23) And you'd miss the forest for the trees - if not be flat out wrong.
24) Finally, what's underpinning opinion? 3 things: Views toward when life begins, control over decisions, and....what else you won't see in these standard polls....views toward women and power:
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NEW SURVEY/THREAD: Abortion rights and access will undergo major shifts this year. Here's what to know about public opinion in 2022.
1) Abortion is not just about a political stance. It's something 65% of women of reproductive age (18-44) say they could envision needing. Also: 58% of men can envision a partner needing
2) There’s a big gap in the % of 18 to 44 year olds who would LIKE to have children in the future (53%) and who actually plan to do so (30%).
THREAD. [NYT] Reporters will continue to misunderstand public opinion on abortion if they only rely on @pewinternet and @Gallup / @GallupPoll tracking Qs. Here's why.
1) Imagine one of the only polling question we used to understand opinion about health care is support or opposition to Obamacare.
2) We'd miss is all sorts of things, such as 74% of voters want the gov't to do MORE to help with costs, most voters want prescription drug reform, many can't afford mental health care, and oh yeah, turns out, most voters actually support most ACA provisions
THREAD. New @perryundem post-election study released. What to know about the 2020 pres. election, the past 4 years, and where voters are now. BUCKLE UP perryundem.com/wp-content/upl…
1. The election was not about issues - not even a global pandemic nor a national economic crisis.
2. Instead, data suggest voters were driven by four things: a) perceptions of Trump's lies; b) feelings toward Trump ("President Trump cares about people like me" and is "a great example of the American Dream"); c) views toward race / power; d) views toward gender / power
1) Most voters think our culture does NOT teach women that they can come forward without fear of consequences on their own lives - including 67% of women
2) The exception is Republican men - 55% who said our culture DOES teach women it's safe to speak up view.publitas.com/perryundem-res…
1) A majority of likely 2020 voters think gender equality has NOT yet been achieved. The exception: 77% of Republican men who say we've made it.
2) 40% of Republican men voters say it's "true" or are not sure whether "Most women get their periods at the first of the month." (We asked this Q to better understand people's knowledge in light of the recent 6-week abortion bans)
Top 10 takeaways from our new gender equality survey with @PlanUSA among 10 to 19 year olds:
1) Boys who played mostly with boy toys growing up (e.g. trucks, guns) v. gender-neutral toys (e.g. legos) are more likely to think about girls' bodies than their brains, hold less egalitarian views, and place less importance on "making the world a better place" as a life goal.
2) Girls who mostly played with girl toys (princesses, etc) are more likely to feel pressure to dress like older women, be sexy or hot, and worry about positive feedback on social media.