> And the polling error was worse in 2020 that 2016.
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The votes haven't even been finished counting in 2020, and that there are shifts over time in the ratios is a well-noted phenomenon. While we're well past the point where that realistically effects the outcome, assessments of polling errors that don't effect the overall outcome may easily be premature (and those started getting made before the race was called, based on the then-current state of the count as if it was final.)
The votes haven't even been finished counting in 2020, and that there are shifts over time in the ratios is a well-noted phenomenon. While we're well past the point where that realistically effects the outcome, assessments of polling errors that don't effect the overall outcome may easily be premature (and those started getting made before the race was called, based on the then-current state of the count as if it was final.)