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Landline-Only Polls Do, in Fact, Have a Republican Bias
A large question going into this year's midterm elections was whether polling agencies who only called landlines were missing a key group of voters: people who only used cell phones. What made this more important was the second hypothesis, that people who only have a cell phone tend to be more liberal.
Now that election results are in, we can check the math. Anecdotally, we saw a few Democrats (most prominently Harry Reid in Nevada) who seemed to outperform their polling numbers. Now Pew—which published a pre-election report on this subject—has found definitively that pollsters were missing a lot of Democrats by not calling cell phones:
In Pew Research's final pre-election poll in 2010, the landline sample of likely voters found Republican candidates ahead 51%-39%, a 12-point lead. In the sample that combined landline and cell phone interviews, the Republican lead was 48%-42%, a six-point advantage. The national vote for House candidates is not yet final; currently, Republicans lead by approximately a seven-point margin.
Here is the hard data. As you can see, adding cell phones gives you a five point swing in the Democratic direction.

Next election, as this trend gets stronger, be very suspicious of polls that don't include cell phones.

Annya Uslontseva commented about 12 hours ago
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