http://nashuaadvocate.blogspot.com/2005/01/news-statisticians-under-fire-for.htmlHere's an excerpt:
News From The U.S. Election Reform Movement
Saturday, January 22, 2005
News: Statisticians Under Fire for Decrying Suspicious National Exit Polls Fight Back, and Fight Back Hard
.
BY STEVEN F. FREEMAN
Russ Baker's critique of my work analyzing the exit-poll discrepancy ("Election 2004: Stolen or Lost?") –- and, by implication, of the courageous stand taken by John Conyers and a small number of his Congressional colleagues –- is flawed from the first line. No one has said, "Exit poll results were more accurate than actual ballots." The question is whether the official count is an accurate reflection of ballots cast. In a system where campaign managers serve as election supervisors, where voting machines provide no assurance that votes are counted as cast, and where counts and "recounts" are conducted in secret, we must rely, unfortunately, on indirect evidence, such as exit polls, to ascertain the veracity of this official count as a measure of actual ballots cast.
Baker's critique begins with a sloppy attempt to shoot the messenger, questioning my credentials. For the record, since obtaining my Ph.D. in Organization Studies from the M.I.T. Sloan School of Management in 1998, I have served for three years as an accredited member of the faculty of the University of Pennsylvania -– originally at the Wharton School of Business, and now in the School of Arts and Sciences; and the remainder of that time at equivalently demanding institutions in Latin America, including an international M.B.A. program established by Harvard University.
Baker discards my findings because I am "not an expert in polling," but I teach research methods and survey design -- a domain that includes polling -- at the University of Pennsylvania.