We see polls for the elections all the time. I’ve never been asked who I’m going to vote for. I recently got a thing from Neilson about what I watch on TV, but never anything political.
Who are they asking? Are they just blind calling numbers? If so it would seem to me to be a small portion of the populace that actually answers unknown numbers.
I’m not being snarky, just curious. If this is the wrong forum, please move.
When I had a landline (through 2008), I got polled all the time. 4-5 times a week during election season, easily. After that I only had a cellphone, but still received a lot of polling calls. I made an effort about 10 years ago to get on no-call lists. I believe political groups were exempt from DNC lists back then, but I believe that’s no longer the case?
I get those calls from time to time. I assume it’s because the voter rolls are public. As a registered Republican (RINO, I only am so I can vote in the primaries), they’re all generally from PACs, not independent/non-partisan pollsters.
I got a phone poll once in 2003. They wanted to know what I thought of Dubya’s “mission accomplished” speech. I assume I got called because I lived in San Diego at the time and he had been in our area to give the speech.
I have disregarded lots of calls and even more texts because I don’t really know who’s asking. And they always want an email address or something.
No thanks.
Used to get polled regularly with the landline. Don’t really answer my cell these days so no polling although I’m guessing some of those calls are polls. In fact, I know they are since I answered one the other day thinking it was a different call I was expecting. Guy tried to launch into a poll but I didn’t have time for it.
I’m in Illinois, so not a battleground state by any means.
I’ve been polled several times for Democratic primaries, generally early in the season. Since I’m lazy and don’t research the candidate until the week before the election I’m usually not very helpful.
I was polled back in 2020 - I can’t really remember why I answered my phone that day, but I gladly participated in the poll which, IIRC, was mostly about the state level races.
I think it was in 2022 that I got polled, twice in the space of about a month. They called my cell phone (I haven’t had a land line in decades). Mostly they wanted to know what issues I was most interested in and how I leaned politically. It seemed like it was geared more toward national issues and not local ones.
I live in a swing state. I’ve gotten random texts and calls before every election. Actually this year has been comparatively slow. I stopped answering unsolicited ones after one morphed into an obvious push poll (“would your support for candidate X go up or down if I told you they kicked puppies?”)
Yes - frequently online (by Civiqs, which I signed up with), and occasionally by phone, though it’s been several years since I got polled by phone. If I have time, I usually will answer.