More moral than the Alcoyan or 'El País' conducting surveys

BarcelonaThe surveys are said to have a kitchen, but it should be specified that there are two sets of stoves. On the one hand, the margin creative That's why it's important to weigh the sample and introduce corrections. And on the other hand, the kitchen of spices, which is done in the editorial office by adding the pepper of intentional headlines or disguising a bad taste with the turmeric of the data buried in the last line. This Monday, three electoral polls are due, and there are enough to soak bread in. The oracles have long predicted a comfortable victory for the PP, which, with Vox added, ensures an equally comfortable governing majority. But this doesn't depress us. The Country, which is titled "The PSOE is hot on the heels of the PP as the leading political force" and includes a graph where the Socialists secure 29.4% of the votes, compared to 30.5% for the Popular Party. But it turns out that the percentage of votes only serves to twist one's back, since governments are built with majorities of deputies. And, as a matter of seat distribution, despite the technical tie in votes, the PP sweeps the deputies. "The Socialists grow due to the fall in the undecided," they state in the subtitle.

Now let's The reason"The PP wins 150/152 seats and the PSOE drops to 106/108." Inside, we're told that Sumar and PSOE have lost 3.4 million votes. The outlook, as we can see, is completely different and is one of enormous triumphalism in favor of the Popular Party. I'm left with that phrase: "The PP remains stagnant, in the best sense of the word, as the inevitable winner of the elections." Stagnant? Sure? Let's see what he says. The World, hardly suspected of being pro-socialist: "Vox's growth hits the PP hard by snatching more than a million votes." What a curious way to stagnate. Polls should shed light on the situation, but in reality, newspapers use them like horse locks to keep readers focused on the straight and narrow.