Election Forecasts Are Mere Guesswork  

From psephologists to astrologers, from journalists to the common man – no one is really immune to this typically Indian ‘disease’ of foretelling the election results before the actual results come in.

Election Forecasts Are Mere Guesswork  

Predicting election outcomes is a hazardous business at the best of times. Even seasoned election watchers and ‘trained’ psephologists have ended up with egg on their faces with their predictions in the past. But so strong is the urge to indulge in crystal gazing that very few people can resist the temptation even after having their predictions go horribly wrong numerous times in the past. From psephologists to astrologers, from journalists to the common man – no one is really immune to this typically Indian ‘disease’ of foretelling the election results before the actual results come in.

Journalists, in particular, suffer from this ‘disease’ more than others. Any journalist worth his/her salt would do his/her share of election forecast before every poll. Part of the reason for this is the fact that most people believe, erroneously, that they (journalists) have a finger on the pulse of the voters and would not let them get away with an apologetic “Frankly, I don’t really know” or an evasive “Your guess is as good as mine”, as has happened countless times with this columnist. People will just not take ‘No’ for an answer and will keep pressing scribes till they come out with a figure. This, in turn, feeds their ego and they start believing they actually have a hotline to the minds of the voters. More often than not, the predictions are pure guesswork or an unwitting reflection of their political biases.