New Jersey
Related: About this forumMonmouth University will shutter its gold-standard polling institute
Monmouth University is planning to imminently shutter its lauded polling institute, sources with direct knowledge of the matter have told the New Jersey Globe, robbing New Jersey and the nation of one of its premier pollsters.
Patrick Murray, the polling institutes director, declined to comment. A Monmouth University press contact did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
Murray, a former pollster at the Rutgers University Eagleton Poll, left to join Monmouth University in 2005, and in the following 20 years built the universitys fledgling polling institute into one of the most well-respected pollsters in the nation. The institute, which conducted polls of both New Jersey races and national elections, was consistently rated as an A+ pollster by FiveThirtyEight and was treated as New Jerseys gold standard poll.
But in recent years, sources told the Globe, administrators at Monmouth University had begun considering whether the polling institute was worth continuing to support. Some university leaders felt it was losing too much money while not attracting enough students, and any poll that Monmouth released that ultimately ended up being inaccurate always a hazard of the polling trade was seen as a possible stain on the universitys image.
https://newjerseyglobe.com/polling/monmouth-university-will-shutter-its-gold-standard-polling-institute/

hlthe2b
(108,886 posts)(No, I don't know this for a fact in THIS situation, but they aren't the first).
ShazamIam
(2,809 posts)This is mostly my opinion since I no longer have a link to the article.
During 2011, there was an article from one of the big think tanks stating that that polling would no longer a problem, or something along those lines, I had saved the article for a few years, but remember it was 2012 - forward that there began to be significant polling versus election results such as the 2012 election, in particular the 2012 election results that had predicted a Romney win.
Polling is influential and is used to manipulate the public.