The Vicious Cycle of SEO @lilyraynyc named—spam, spam updates, repeat—has an off-ramp.
In my new case study at @sengineland I show how being explicit about topical authority via entity schema and internal links protected SEL from a traffic decline.
https://t.co/k0rpQYGAQV
in my newest @goodauth post, I adjust the approval ratings for statewide politicians to see what they would look like if those states had the same partisan balance as the country as a whole. @AndyBeshearKY stands out even more with these adjusted ratings
Per the @PhillyInquirer, the Israeli-Palestinian issue loomed large in Tuesday's PA-3 primary. Does that mean that it is a top priority for Democrats or Democratic activists?
I use @YouGovAmerica data to show the answer is "no" in a new piece for @goodauth (link in the reply).
On April 10th, CEL Co-Director Alan Wiseman, PhD, was a keynote speaker at CIVICS CON, a civics convention in Midwest City, Oklahoma. There, he presented on effective lawmaking in state legislatures, with a focus on Oklahoma.
earlier this month @TuftsUniversity senior Miles Kendrick and I fielded a survey with @YouGovAmerica to better understand what acts people think are political violence. there are some points of agreement & some clear differences of opinion. link to our @goodauth write-up below
Structural model suggests the key is a Political Science PhD running things. But the PhD is from Rochester so no one cares about estimating the reduced form.
That young men are sexist and hate women and are increasingly conservative has become one of those stylized facts of public debate.
But is it even true?
Maibritt Henkel looked into the question for @TheArgumentMag, using our original polling:
https://t.co/iZJ0wG5noa
People with a high school diploma who make middle-class incomes are the most likely to be Republicans.
People with graduate degrees (regardless of income) are the least likely to align with the GOP.
Yes, and I'll add that women candidates are actually more electable in this meta-analysis of conjoint experiments: https://t.co/2kLKhL34sd
(With some variation across countries, parties, etc.)
Data on this is highly questionable outside of an n=2 (Harris + Clinton). In the thousands of downballot and gubernatorial elections we have data for, there's no evidence women are less electable.
Female candidates do better with women and worse with men, but women vote more.
Trying my hand at the delicate genre of accessible, opinionated prognostication by launching a Substack. First up: deception, delegation, and what opinion research might look like in the not-too-distant future. https://t.co/TUmq4WdtIK
there's a new comprehensive report out from @YouGovAmerica using CES data to plot trends in partisanship over the past two decades. i've got a piece up today in @goodauth summarizing some key findings. links to both in the reply!
I found this fantastic new paper (link below) that asks some really detailed questions about abortion.
People seem to have some pretty nuanced views.
When the mother's life is threatened, 2/3 favor no limit.
If it's a sex selection abortion, 38% are fully opposed.
The CEL is proud to announce the release of the 2023-2024 CO, HI, and DE legislative sessions SLES scores. For more information about the scores and to access them, please visit our website.
Link: https://t.co/RkqyFmaU4m
1 thing about 2016 Trump supporters' foreign policy attitudes--I wrote about for 538 (URL 👇)--is that they weren't especially pro Iraq War back in 2007. But they were more likely to describe themselves as hawks.
They weren't so much isolationist as valuing shows of American 💪.