News websites routinely run online “polls” in which readers can weigh in on some controversy of the day. It’s just a web gimmick — the polls aren’t scientific, don’t even pretend to fine representative samples, and have zero predictive value. They’re just supposed to be fun.
Validity aside, these “polls” tend to get attention. For example, late Tuesday night, the Hartford Courant posed a question to online readers about whether they’d back Joe Lieberman or Lowell Weicker if the two squared off in Connecticut’s Senate race next year. Someone in Lieberman’s office thought it was time to rally her troops and make sure the results worked in the senator’s favor. Little did she know that Kos would end up posting her email.
From: Sherry Brown
To: ‘Sherry Brown’
Sent: Tue Dec 06 21:31:36 2005
Subject: Sorry for the blast email….But the Courant
is doing an online poll in which we have just fallen behind between Lowell Weicker and Joe Lieberman. We’ve been ahead all day, but one of the internet bloggers got hold of it and is promoting it among the extreme lefties. Go to the Main Page – see Joe’s picture and then there is a link “Weicker – the antiwar candidate?” click onto that page – scroll down – right hand side there is a poll.
Let’s turn it around!!! Thanks. (and please note that I did NOT ask you for money, which may be a first)
Oops. As of this morning, Weicker leads Lieberman, 82.3% to 13.4%.
And as for the chief political aide of a Democratic senator casually dismissing “extreme lefties,” I can only say that people really should be more cautious about their choice of words in blast emails.