One top pollster issued a warning that many deeply submerged Republican voters would end up being severely undercounted once again throughout the few weeks running up to the November 2022 Midterms Elections.
The founder and senior strategist and pollster of Trafalgar group, Robert Cahaly, expressed that with the upcoming election that sits just around the corner, many Republican voters would be severely underestimated in the wake of legacy media figureheads and establishment politicians labeled MAGA republicans as “enemies of the state.”
“These submerged voters aren’t answering polls, they aren’t putting stickers on their cars, or signs in their yard — they’re not even posting on social media,” stated Cahaly. “They are underwater. They’re not saying a word to anybody until election day.”
Cahaly stated that voters should refrain from trusting polls over the next few weeks, especially taking into consideration the idea that many pollsters failed to accurately predict the previous three elections by putting extreme favor toward Democrats and heavily undercounting Republicans.
“Polls have two purposes,” he stated. “They’re either to reflect the electorate, or they’re to affect the electorate — and too many of these media and university-based polls are designed to affect the electorate and are trying to create a false narrative quite often when there’s not one.”
With the increasing skepticism of polling throughout America on the rise because of false narratives created by many pollsters, Cahaly stated that such groups have these groups have started to drift into the possibility of getting the entire next election cycle entirely wrong, once again.
“And so now they’re having to get back to reality because they don’t mind at all being wrong, but they hate it when somebody is right,” he stated.
In November, registered voters across the country will show up to polls to once again flip the political scale in one direction or another in quite a few highly controversial races and issues. However, with quite a few important critical elections in the Senate, House, and gubernatorial races, Republican and Democrat candidates and their respective voters are both showing optimism for the balance of power in Washington.
Republicans in the House have been bragging about a massive red wave of confidence, believing that they could win back a majority in the house if they can successfully secure a total of five seats.
One battleground state that has been under the extremely focused eye of the country, Pennsylvania has Republican Dr. Mehmet Oz facing off against Lt. Governor Democrat John Fetterman for the currently open seat in the Senate of the state.
With roughly $90 million already spent on the race, it has shifted quite a bit since the campaigning kicked off for both of the presidents. However, issues surrounding the health of Fetterman came into question after the candidate suffered from a stroke prior to making his way out to the campaign trail.