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International Journal of Public Opinion Research Advance Access published online on November 10, 2009

International Journal of Public Opinion Research, doi:10.1093/ijpor/edp048
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© The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The World Association for Public Opinion Research. All rights reserved.

American and German Elite Journalists’ Attitudes Toward Election Polls

Wolfgang Wichmann and Frank Brettschneider

Address correspondence to Wolfgang Wichmann, University of Hohenheim, Kurfuerstenstr. 52, 87600 Kaufbeuren, Germany, E-mail: wowichmann{at}web.de

Opinion polls are a highly prominent feature in today’s reporting on election campaigns. But the relationship between journalists and opinion polls in the U.S. and Germany has been described as a rivalry in the past. This study presents results of two surveys that were carried out among American and German elite journalists. For the first time this study provides quantitative statements about the opinion of White House correspondents toward opinion polls and how they use poll results in their day-to-day business. Compared to results of a 2005 survey among members of the Bundespressekonferenz in Germany, this study reveals relevant similarities but also important differences between the attitudes of elite journalists in the two countries. In a nutshell, the findings lead to the conclusion that White House correspondents as well as members of the Bundespressekonferenz have a more confident than skeptical attitude toward scientific polling and the use of political poll results in their work. Even more, the results show that White House correspondents have a more confident attitude than their German colleagues.


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