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South Carolina Pollster Rankings

By TJHalva | 1 point | March 7, 2016 at 9:31:48 PM CT 0 Comments

South Carolina published their results a while ago, but I'm just getting around to entering all the data and capturing the exit poll information while trying to keep current on other upcoming elections. Here's a recap of the results; Bernie got crushed:

SC Primary Results [1]Sanders (D)Clinton (D)Total
All26.02%
96,498
73.44%
272,379
370,904
Female21%79%61%
Male32%68%39%
Blacks14%86%61%
Whites46%54%35%

Polling in South Carolina was abysmal; the best performing poll in South Carolina had a greater deviation than the worst performing poll from New Hampshire. The polling very clearly indicated a Clinton victory, by 28%, but polling also failed to assess the scope of her eventual 47% margin. Part of this is due to the timeliness of releases; just two polls were released within the week leading up to the Saturday primary.

Another possible reason for this deviation was the low turnout of just 370,904 voters. Turnout dropped by 30% in comparison to 2008's 532,227 votes [2]; 2016 Hillary would have lost to Obama by 20k votes. John Edwards, the 3rd place finisher in 2008, would have lost to Bernie by just under three thousands votes.

Part of the dropoff can be explained by the participation rate by race; in 2008 [3], the exit polls indicated a 54% Blacks to 46% Whites ratio. In 2016, Blacks accounted for 61% of the electorate and they voted for Hillary by a 72% margin. Polling indicated a 47% margin, so once again, the polling was off.

The rules for our rankings are unchanged since our New Hampshire rankings. We did collect race based demographic information in South Carolina, but that data is not factored into the rankings presented below, mainly due to the sparsity of data. The gender expectation methodology was used.

We've taken each pollster's most recent poll with a 30 day cutoff; polls with blank spaces did not release sufficient information to perform the deviation calculations. These polls are included for reference and are not ranked. Polls toward the top of the table have a lower deviation relative to the final result; a lower deviation implies greater accuracy.

PollTopline DeviationMale DeviationFemale DeviationRe-Weighted Gender DeviationNet Deviation
SC: Monmouth University Polling Institute
Feb 14-16, 2016
18.42%
SC: Anderson Robbins Research, Shaw & Company Research, Fox News
Feb 15-17, 2016
19.42%15%25%19.1%59.1%
SC: American Research Group
Feb 17-18, 2016
18.42%27%15%17.68%59.68%
SC: Marist Institute for Public Opinion, NBC News, Wall Street Journal
Feb 15-17, 2016
19.42%20%23%19.83%62.83%
SC: Clemson University
Feb 20-25, 2016
21.45%
SC: Emerson College
Feb 22-24, 2016
23.74%21.57%29.18%24.21%74.95%
SC: Selzer & Company, Bloomberg
Feb 13-17, 2016
25.42%
SC: Public Policy Polling
Feb 14-15, 2016
26.42%38%19%24.41%81.41%
SC: YouGov, CBS News
Feb 10-12, 2016
28.42%45%17%25.92%87.92%
SC: ORC International, CNN News
Feb 10-15, 2016
29.42%31%
SC: Gravis Marketing, One America News Network
Feb 11-13, 2016
29.42%

Michigan and Louisiana vote tomorrow; the final projections for Michigan will be posted sometime before the polls close. Pollster rankings for Georgia, Massachusetts, Oklahoma, Texas and Virginia are still being worked on.

Sources
1

Retrieved on March 7, 2016 at 7:45:24 PM CT | Revision: 1

2

Retrieved on March 7, 2016 at 9:34:15 PM CT | Revision: 1

3

Retrieved on February 27, 2016 at 5:31:51 PM CT | Revision: 1

TAGS: scprimary, southcarolina, dem2016

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