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A lot of polls are going to be wrong come Election Day, according to
pollster and analyst Pat Caddell who said Friday that America should be
ready for a “shock.”
“Something is going on in this country in these polls,” Caddell said,
assessing the differences among polls that show Trump with a narrow lead,
Clinton with a narrow lead, or Clinton with a large lead. The most recent
polls put Trump in the lead.
“All of the tracking polls keep holding at Trump being ahead,” he
continued. “And then all of these other polls that are one-off polls, or
whatever.”
Caddell said with so many polls, it was hard to know which were reliable.
“I don’t know how they’re doing some of these university polls. You just
put the name of some university and apparently it becomes credible, whether
they know what they’re doing, or not.”
“But in any event, polling is all over the place. Something isn’t adding
up,” said Caddell.
To him, that means there is a trend going on that has not been fully
captured in the polls.
“Something is going to happen here, I just sense it,” he said.
That something, he said, could be from Trump, who on Friday in North
Carolina promised “Brexit times five.”
Either “Hillary will glide into the White House, or we’re headed for one
of the greatest shocks in American politics. I think it’s a very close call
. I think the shock potential is enormous,” he said.
Caddell is not alone. Veteran pollster John Zogby noted the immense strength
of Trump’s support.
“I’ve been doing this a long, long time and these races go up and down and
up and down,” Zogby said. “We still have 18 days to go, that means 18,
maybe 36 news cycles as well.”
Zogby noted the depth of support for Trump.
“You see still a very passionate Donald Trump support. I see three credible
polls that are out there that show Donald Trump getting 85, 89 percent of
Republican support, winning among whites, winning by double digits among men
, leading in two of those polls tied in another,” Zogby said.
“For the umpteenth time, it’s way too early and we don’t know who’s
going to vote,” he insisted. |