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Trump's Fans Declare Unscientific Online Polls To Be The New Gold Standard

During the presidential primary season, it was always amusing to watch Donald Trump tout his massive leads in online polls, the notoriously unscientific surveys (link is external) in which participants can vote more than once and fans of one candidate often swarm the vote(link is external).

For example, one online poll has Green Party candidate Jill Stein leading the field with nearly 65% support(link is external)—hardly a precise barometer of the nation.

Soon after last night’s debate was over, Trump declared himself the winner (link is external) by citing the results of online polls. “I won every single poll other than CNN,” he said, triumphantly tweeting(link is external) the findings of several online surveys.

He even claimed he won a CBS poll that didn’t actually exist(link is external) .

Four scientific polls(link is external) of(link is external) debate(link is external) viewers(link is external), on the other hand, found that most viewers believed Clinton won the debate.

While it is comical to watch Trump feed his insatiable narcissism by flaunting unrepresentative polls, Trump’s allies in the media are taking a page from the presumptive GOP nominee.

Fox News host Steve Doocy said(link is external) it was “crazy” that “Hillary was actually number four behind Jill Stein and Gary Johnson” in one online poll. Fox’s Sean Hannity hyped(link is external) the nonexistent CBS poll that supposedly showed a Trump lead.

Hannity went so far as to say that unscientific online polls are more accurate(link is external) than real polls because they “have hundreds of thousands if not millions” of respondents, a statement that’s laughable to anyone with an elementary understanding of statistics.

Another Fox News pundit, Martha MacCallum, even dismissed the CNN poll as an “outlier(link is external)” because it conflicted with the results of online surveys. The conservative network ran an article (link is external) —with no byline—on how “online surveys had Donald Trump as the yuge winner,” hailing them as “a good gauge of enthusiasm.”

It seems that many conservatives learned nothing from the 2012 “unskew” the polls movement. That year, fringe right-wing blogs began to champion the conspiracy theory that liberals in the media were skewing public opinion polls in favor of President Obama to hide the fact that Mitt Romney was the clear favorite. The theory eventually made its way toconservative talk radio(link is external),Fox News(link is external) and even to Romney’s presidential campaign(link is external).

One of the most prominent poll truthers in that election was none other than Donald Trump(link is external).

When Romney lost, many of the conservatives promoting the “unskew” myth were shocked(link is external).

Dana Perino, a former Bush aide turned Fox News host, described(link is external) how many Republicans, including herself, “believed that the polls were skewed in Obama’s favor, and did not take conservative enthusiasm into consideration.”

“On election night when President Obama easily won reelection, I vowed to never put myself in that position again,” she said.

However, her colleagues are doing(link is external) just (link is external) that(link is external), and Fox News commentators are now citing everything from crowd sizes(link is external) to Facebook likes(link is external) to prove that the polls are wrong and Trump is way ahead.

Trump himself has said that polls showing him trailing are “phony(link is external)” and that the only way he would lose would be if the election were rigged(link is external) against him and widespread voter fraud(link is external) occurred. One of his advisers, Roger Stone, said that if Trump loses due to an “illegitimate” election, “it will be a bloodbath(link is external).”

The Trump campaign and its supporters in the media aren’t even bothering to “unskew” the polls anymore and are instead content with citing bogus online surveys that should be taken seriously by no one.

As Trump preaches disdain for basic statistics, it seems his conservative allies are more than happy to follow along.

(This post also appears on the Huffington Post(link is external)).