News Outlet Caves to Democratic Senate Candidate, Kills Poll That Makes Her Look Bad

A recent controversy has emerged in Michigan’s Democratic primary race. A poll conducted by Mitchell research & Communications showed that candidate Mallory McMorrow only had 6% support, significantly lower than her main competitors-Dr.Abdul El-sayed with 42% and U.S. Rep. Haley Stephens with 33%. This poll faced suspicion and backlash after McMorrow’s campaign questioned its validity, especially since it showed her support as markedly absent across demographics, including in her home county. Campaign officials claimed undue pressure was applied by McMorrow’s team to prevent the poll from being published, alleging that responses might have been manipulated due to the survey’s methodology. The pollster confirmed that McMorrow’s campaign exerted strong influence on the decision not to release the results.Notably, polling experts like Nate Silver criticized the decision to withhold the poll, viewing it as problematic amid the high-stakes Senate race in Michigan. The race’s outcome is especially important as it could influence control of the Senate,with Republican candidate Mike Rogers viewed as the likely GOP nominee.




The already-dramatic Democratic primary contest in Michigan just got a new plot twist.

A poll run on behalf of a news outlet ended up getting killed from coverage after complaints from the third-place candidate’s campaign, according to Politico.

And one of the nation’s best-known pollsters has gone public with his contempt for the decision.

Washington Beltway-based Politico reported Wednesday that state Sen. Mallory McMorrow’s campaign raised serious questions about the poll’s results with Michigan Information & Research Service, a news outlet that covers the state’s lawmakers in Lansing.

It’s understandable that any campaign might object to a poll that shows its candidates with single-digit support — and the poll in question had McMorrow at only 6 percent.

The race’s two leaders, meanwhile, were “Dr.” Abdul El-Sayed — a far-left progressive endorsed by socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders and a candidate who has made potentially questionable claims to being a physician — and U.S. Rep. Haley Stephens, a more establishment pick who has been endorsed by Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer.

El-Sayed had 42 percent support, according to the poll. Stevens had 33 percent.

With the Aug. 4 state primary date fast approaching, the McMorrow team hit back hard.

According to Politico, the campaign approached Michigan Information & Research Service with serious questions about the poll’s findings — beyond the dismal showing of the candidate herself — the only Caucasian among the three serious contenders.

For instance, Politico reported, the poll found zero percent of black voters saying they were undecided. Stevens, a black woman, dominated in that demographic with 69 percent, according to the poll, while El-Sayed, the son of Egyptian immigrants, brought in 31 percent.

It also found Stevens with only 5 percent support in Oakland County, her home base, according to Politico.

Kyle Melinn, a news editor with Michigan Information & Research Service, told Politico the news outlet abandoned coverage of the poll after hearing from McMorrow’s campaign.

However, he said he first talked to other pollsters about concerns about the poll’s findings. He said they agreed there was a problem.

MIRS didn’t run with the poll, Melinn told Politico, “because I didn’t feel comfortable with it.”

The pollster behind the survey, Steve Mitchell of Mitchell Research & Communications, told Politico that McMorrow’s campaign put “intense pressure” on MIRS not to run with the poll.

“The poll, in the eyes of the McMorrow campaign, understated their support,” Mitchell, whose firm Mitchell Research & Communications conducted and paid for the poll, told Politico. “And they put intense pressure on MIRS, and therefore MIRS decided that they weren’t going to run the survey. That’s their decision, and I support their decision.”

One potential area of concern was the method used to solicit responses. According to Politico, the poll relied on the technique known as “text to web,” in which potential respondents are contacted by text. If they are participating in the survey, they go to a link included in the text to fill out their answers.

According to Politico, McMorrow’s campaign said that it opened the door to text recipients abusing the link, either by participating in the poll numerous times or passing the link on to others who aren’t part of the initial polling survey. That could have polluted the results.

However, Nate Silver, founder of the polling website FiveThirtyEight and a national voice when it comes to political polling, published a post on the social media platform X Wednesday, excoriating the MIRS decision.

“This sucks, McMorrow’s campaign has sucked, and it’s a completely indefensible decision by @MIRSnews not to run the poll,” Silver wrote.

The stakes go beyond the Michigan Democratic Party.

With the Senate seat being open this year by the retirement of Michigan Sen. Gary Peters, a Democrat, it’s viewed as an opportunity for a Republican challenger to win — and the GOP to pick up another seat in the upper chamber.

Mike Rogers, a Republican former U.S. representative in Michigan with the backing of President Donald Trump, has been described by the Washington Examiner as the “presumptive GOP nominee.”

Whatever candidate emerges from the Democratic Party’s primary will be standing in Rogers’ way toward flipping the seat for Trump’s party — in a state that’s a crucial front in the midterm elections.

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