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Psephology / Public opinion / Opinion poll / United States presidential election / Democratic Party presidential primaries / Douglas Wilder / Voter turnout / Statistics / Politics / Bradley effect


No More Wilder Effect, Never a Whitman Effect: When and Why Polls Mislead about Black and Female Candidates
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Document Date: 2010-05-03 08:59:05


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City

New York / Washington / /

Company

USA Today / Ford / /

Country

United States / /

IndustryTerm

news media / online appendix / telephone surveys / /

Organization

Harvard University / Playboy party / Democratic National Committee / Senate / U.S. House of Representatives / Illinois Senate / Southern Political Science Association / /

Person

Trent Lott / Carol Mosley-Braun / Michael McDonald / Daniel J. Hopkins / Tom Bradley / Troy Brown Sr. / Hillary Clinton / Barack Obama / David Dinkins / Wilder Effect / Willie Horton / Christine Whitman / Douglas Wilder / Ron Sims / Harold Ford Jr. / Theo Mitchell / Alan Keyes / Susan Collins / Decline / /

PoliticalEvent

presidential primaries / Democratic presidential primaries / Senate race / Senate elections / general election / presidential election / the 2008 primaries / Democratic vote / Presidential Elections / Democratic primaries / /

Position

Female Year Democrat Governor / Clerk / operative / Senator / Incumbent Including Governor / runner / candidate and the candidate / King / Governor / model for the five resulting data sets / white actress / Bishop and Fisher / campaign manager / candidate / /

ProvinceOrState

Texas / New Jersey / Ohio / Virginia / Louisiana / New York / Michigan / Tennessee / Melton / South Carolina / Mississippi / Florida / New Hampshire / /

PublishedMedium

The Journal of Politics / USA Today / /

Technology

simulation / /

URL

http /

SocialTag