First a
word to say that there is a new feature in this blog, for this election. This
blog is a collaboration with P.J. Fournier (Qc125.com), which allows for a
combination of competence.
And so, today’s
topic, what should we expect for the French presidential election tomorrow?
Let us
examine first the polls published during the last weeks. This first graph show
change in support for the five main candidates since the beginning of March. It
shows what other researchers, pollsters and media alike have shown. Support for
Macron and Le Pen has varied a little since the beginning of the campaign.
Support for Macron is quite stable. Meanwhile, support for Le Pen decreases
somewhat. Support for Fillon has been stable lately while Hamon and Mélenchon
exchange support. At the end, Mélenchon is now tied with Fillon at 20%. These
estimates are dependent upon all the polls published since the beginning of
March.
If we use
only the polls conducted since the beginning of April, the analysis is less
dependent upon older polls. Is the portrait different? Not really. The
conclusions are the same. All the polls show Macron slightly ahead of Le Pen,
with Fillon and Mélenchon tied in 3rd and 4th place.
And what about the
margin of error?
If we take
the margin of error of each poll, we could conclude, as some have done, that
« everything can happen”, this because support for the four main
candidates are usually within the margin of error for individual polls. This
interpretation is not adequate. The margin of error for the all the polls
combined is much smaller. In a way, it is as if we could combine all the
samples or if we took into account the fact that the current estimations are
dependent upon the previous ones. It is not as if « anything » can
happen. Since the method used in the preceding graphs does not allow to show
the margin of error of the estimation of the regression lines, the following
graph will allow to show this in a more evident way.
Since there
has been lots of movement in the two last weeks, it is possible to estimate the
margin of error for all the polls published during that period, in a way as if
they had all been conducted at the same time. However it gives more weight to
the last polls (using a squared weighting) in order to compensate. It is a
conservative estimation of the margin of error. The following graph allows for
a visual portrait of the confidence intervals for each candidate’s support. It
takes into account all the polls conducted from April 8 to 21. The intervals
are not large since there is not much variation between the estimates of the
various pollsters because of the methodology they use (see later on in this
post).
What can we
conclude? If the polls are reliable, it is impossible to be sure who, between
Macron and Le Pen, will finish first because statistically they get equal
support (the confidence intervals overlap). The same thing happens with Fillon
and Mélenchon. However, the graph also shows that the confidence intervals for
Fillon and Le Pen slightly overlap. Le Pen could get a score as low as 20.7%
while Fillon could go as high as 21%, i.e. he could finish second. On the
contrary, Mélenchon is significantly lower than all the other main candidates.
In short, if we rely on polls, the two who are most likely to finish first are
Macron and Le Pen but the possibility of a Macron-Fillon 2nd round
also exists. We have tried other hypotheses using different periods and weights
and we get similar results.
Are polls reliable?
This is
« the question ». In order to answer this question, one has two rely
on two types of information, i.e. the methodological ones and history.
First, methodological information. What is interesting in the French
situation is that the pollsters have to file methodological information and
their data with the Commission des sondages,
a government body. The Commission’s experts can check the data and decide
whether the estimates match the data for each poll. The methodological
“Notices” are available for everybody to consult on the Commission’s web site
here: http://www.commission-des-sondages.fr/notices/.
One author
of this blog, Claire Durand, had examined these files for the 2002 presidential
election (see: https://academic.oup.com/poq/article/68/4/602/1884181/The-Polls-in-the-2002-French-Presidential-Election#29033826) and the 2007 election https://doi.org/10.1093/ijpor/edn029. In
2002, when respondents were asked whom they had voted for at the preceding
election, only around 5% reported having voted for Jean-Marie Le Pen, the
extreme-right candidate who had received 15% at the 1997 election. In 2007, JM
Le Pen had been over-estimated at 14% while he received 10% of the vote. Just
after the first round, only 3% to 7% reported having voted for him. In short,
support for JM Le Pen was largely under reported and this caused problems in
the estimation of the vote. It was necessary to multiply those who declared
having voted for Le Pen by 2-3 times and even more. When we examine the files
at the Commission des sondages this year, the situation is very different.
Support for Marine Le Pen in the 2012 election is only slightly under reported.
Support for the two main candidates, Hollande and Sarkozy, tends to be
over-reported, a situation that is usual for that type of question.
This year, pollsters like
Opinion Way and IFOP present the results of its polls, before any weighting or
adjustment, and after weighting and adjustment, this for the whole sample and
for those who declare being sure to vote. These estimations show that weighting
and adjustments have a very small impact on estimations. The information from
the other pollsters are less detailed but the information we could consult
allow to be confident that the samples are quite representative socio-demographically
and socio-politically. It is thus
possible to conclude that a catastrophe like in 2002 is not likely to occur
this year. Reports of past vote are very accurate. This could be due to the
fact that most polls are now self-administered (web polls) and also to the fact
that support for Marine Le Pen is much less “shameful” than support for her
father.
However, adjusting using report
of past vote that is used in France (and also by many pollsters in the UK) will
normally tend to produce an underestimation of the candidates whose share is
increasing compared to the previous election and overestimate those whose share
is decreasing, this because report of past vote is not very reliable and is
even less reliable when time has passed. In short, people tend to adjust their
memory on their current voting intention (see: http://surveyinsights.org/?p=3543)
Given this information and the
fact that the data is checked by the Commission’s experts, herding – like what had
occurred in the French election of 2002 where five out of six estimates of
support for Jospin were similar – would be almost impossible and could be
detected. The low variance in estimates is likely due to adjustments using
recall of previous votes, a procedure that mathematically reduces variance.
Now
a word about history. Historically,
in the 1st round of the French presidential elections, right wing
candidates tend to be under-estimated and left-wing candidates over-estimated.
In addition, in elections in general, support for small candidates tend to be
over-estimated, either because supporters tend to vote less or because they
finally decide to cast a “strategic” vote for one of the candidates in the
lead. What happened in 2012? The vote for Hollande and Sarkozy has been
estimated almost perfectly (https://fr.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liste_de_sondages_sur_l%27%C3%A9lection_pr%C3%A9sidentielle_fran%C3%A7aise_de_2012#Avril_2012). However, the vote for Marine Le Pen
had been lightly underestimated (one-two points lower than her final score of
17.9%) and support for Mélenchon had been quite overestimated, at 14-15 %, while
he received 11.1% of the vote.
What
are the consequences for tomorrow’s election? Le Pen, who has slightly increase her support
compared to 2012 and who has been historically underestimated, could be
underestimated on Sunday. As for Fillon, it is more difficult to reach a
conclusion. He does not have a positive image in the media and the right-wing
candidates tend to be underestimated. However, since he has less support than
Sarkozy at the preceding election, adjustment using vote recall could lead to
an overestimation. If these two possible effects cancel out, his support is
very well estimated. For Mélenchon and Hamon, likely overestimation, Mélenchon
because he is on the “far-left” and he has been substantially overestimated in
2012, Hamon, because small candidates tend to be overestimated. And what about Macron? Well, for Macron, we
have no reliable information that would allow to devise whether his support is
adequately estimated.
In conclusion, unless there is a catastrophe like in 2002,
which is very unlikely given the methodological information provided, the
highest probability is Macron – Le Pen for the 2nd round. All the
analyses lead to this conclusion. A poll conducted in the middle of last week
has shown Le Pen, Fillon and Mélenchon tied but the next polls did not show
similar estimates. In fact, the most recent polls all showed increase support
for Macron. The second possibility would be Macron-Fillon for the 2nd
round. It is not likely but it cannot be totally excluded. Why not a
Macron-Mélenchon? In addition to what has already been mentioned, we should add
that the Brexit reminded us that “old” people win consultations, and “old”
people support Fillon more than Mélenchon. Is it possible that the polls go
wrong? In such an election, it is possible, but it is unlikely.
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