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President-elect Donald Trump, accompanied by SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, speaks to members of the media at Trump Tower in New York, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2016. (Photo: AP)

President-elect Donald Trump, accompanied by SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son, speaks to members of the media at Trump Tower in New York, Tuesday, Dec. 6, 2016. (Photo: AP)

President-elect Donald J. Trump is still enjoying increased favorability ratings post election, though he dipped below the 50-percent majority threshold. The PPD Poll, which conducted the most accurate surveys in 2016 on both the national and statewide level, finds 49% of likely voters now view the New York businessman favorably, down slightly from 52% two weeks ago.

Interestingly, his image among minorities improved on the margins but ticked down among whites. This week, 59% of whites view Mr. Trump favorably, down from 61% in the prior PPD Poll. Though the percentage of black voters who view him favorably also fell to 10% this week, down from 15%, the percentage viewing him unfavorably also fell from 71% to 69%. The same dynamic was found among Hispanics, with the Trump favorability gauge falling from 33% to 31% at the same time the percentage viewing him unfavorably fell from 66% to 64%.

Female voters also appear to be softening somewhat toward the incoming president, with the percentage of women viewing him unfavorably falling from 49% to 46%. In the last PPD Poll, 59% of male voters had propelled the Trump favorability gauge to its highest level ever, but this week it ticked back down a tad to 56%.

The PPD Poll, which suspended results during the Christmas week, was conducted before President-elect Trump announced Sprint has agreed to bring back some 5,000 jobs to the U.S. and OneWeb investing at home rather than abroad to the tune of 3,000 jobs.

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On the question, “Do you approve or disapprove of how President-elect Donald J. Trump is handling the transition?” a still solid 53% still say they approve and only 36% still say they disapprove. That disapproval rating is down from 38% in the prior PPD Poll and from 41% measured the week before last. The approval number is also down, but only 3 points from 56%.

Throughout the campaign, PPD Polls repeatedly found voters had a more favorable image of Mr. Trump in the battleground states than voters nationwide. For example, in the final PPD Sunshine State Battleground Poll, 45% of Floridians had a favorable view of the then-Republican presidential candidate, while 52% had an unfavorable view of him.

The PPD Poll follows level 1 AAPOR standards of disclosure and WAPOR/ESOMAR code of conduct. The survey was conducted from Dec. 16 to Dec. 28–excluding Dec. 24 thru 25–and is based on 2102 interviews of likely voters participating in the PPD Internet Polling Panel.

Trump Favorability: President-elect Donald J. Trump is

unemployment-benefits

Weekly jobless claims, or first-time claims for unemployment benefits reported by the Labor Department.

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims fell by 10,000 to 265,000 for the week ending December 24, higher than the 264,000 estimate. The prior week was unrevised at 275,000.

The four-week moving average–which is widely considered a better gauge, as it irons-out weekly volatility–was 263,000, a decline of 750 from the previous week’s unrevised average of 263,750. While the report marks 95 consecutive weeks of initial claims below 300,000, the longest streak since 1970, long-term unemployment and decreased labor participation has shrunk the pool of eligible applicants.

Simply put, there aren’t as many people eligible to even apply for state unemployment benefits.

A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors impacting this week’s initial claims and no state was triggered “on” the Extended Benefits program during the week ending December 10.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending December 10 were in Alaska (4.8), Montana (2.6), New Jersey (2.5), Puerto Rico (2.4), California (2.3), Pennsylvania (2.3), Connecticut (2.2), Wyoming (2.2), the Virgin Islands (2.1), and West Virginia (2.1).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending December 17 were in Ohio (+2,625), Wisconsin (+2,083), Michigan (+1,683), Massachusetts (+1,510), and New Jersey (+1,380), while the largest decreases were in Pennsylvania (-1,521), Georgia (- 1,500), Colorado (-818), Florida (-808), and West Virginia (-737).

The Labor Department said weekly jobless claims

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second right, attends a weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2016. (Photo: AP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, second right, attends a weekly cabinet meeting in Jerusalem, Sunday, Dec. 25, 2016. (Photo: AP)

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded to Secretary of State John Kerry who used his farewell speech to the State Department Wednesday to slam Israel. Prime Minister Netanyahu slammed the speech as “skewed” and said he was “deeply disappointed” Mr. Kerry decided to “pay lip service to terror” groups in the Middle East.

“Secretary Kerry paid lip service to the unrelenting campaign of terror that has been waged by the Palestinians against the Jewish State.” The prime minister said later: “Israelis do not need to be lectured about the importance of peace by foreign leaders.”

The prime minister, who was overwhelming reelected in 2015 despite U.S. President Barack Obama meddling in the Israeli parliamentary elections, said the U.S.-Israeli relationship with endure the strain of the Obama administration and, under the new Trump administration, grow to be stronger than ever.

It was his most forceful response to anti-Israeli bias out of the Obama administration to date and come as U.S.-Israeli relations reach their lowest point in decades, a trend that began almost immediately after President Barack Obama took office. Mr. Kerry’s speech was billed as a path forward in the Middle East peace process, but instead was used as an opportunity to defend the U.S. decision to allow the U.N. Security Council to condemn Israeli settlements last week.

Israeli officials described the move as a betrayal and Mr. Netanyahu himself previously described the U.S. decision as an “ambush.” The Israeli government accused the U.S. of orchestrating the vote on the resolution condemning the settlements.

“We have it on absolutely incontestable evidence that the United States organized, advanced and brought this resolution to the United Nations Security Council,” he added. “We’re share this information with the new administration… It’s absolutely true.”

Ahead of a defiant speech by outgoing Secretary of State John Kerry, President-elect Donald J. Trump in a series of tweets told Israel to “stay strong,” adding he will not “continue to let Israel be treated with such total disdain and disrespect.”

Mr. Kerry’s speech was lopsided toward the issue of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and ignored the reality that the Palestinians refuse to even accept the right of the state of Israel to exist.

“This was always about Israel’s right to exist,” Prime Minister Netanyahu said.

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu responded to Secretary

Donald Trump, left, meets at Trump Tower with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on September 25, 2016.

Donald Trump, left, meets at Trump Tower with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on September 25, 2016.

Ahead of a defiant speech by outgoing Secretary of State John Kerry, President-elect Donald J. Trump in a series of tweets told Israel to “stay strong,” adding he will not “continue to let Israel be treated with such total disdain and disrespect.”

Sec. Kerry’s comments were made during a farewell speech to the State Department and after the U.S. decision to allow the U.N. Security Council to condemn Israeli settlements last week. Israeli officials described the move as a betrayal, but Sec. Kerry claimed that the U.S. was acting in the best interest of the Israeli nation. He went on to tell Israelis that–under the one state solution–Israel can either be Jewish or democratic, a statement that received widespread criticism minutes after he uttered it.

“There are a similar number of Jews and Palestinians living between the Jordan River and Mediterranean Sea. They have a choice. They can choose to live together in one state or they can separate into two states,” he said. “But here is a fundamental reality, if the choice is one state, Israel can either be Jewish or democratic, it cannot be both.”

He argued a two-state solution remains the only way to a “just and lasting peace,” warning “that future is now in jeopardy.”

Mr. Kerry’s speech was lopsided toward the issue of Israeli settlements in the West Bank and ignored the reality that the Palestinians refuse to even accept the right of the state of Israel to exist. While certain elements of the Palestinian Authority publicly claim they support a two-state solution, decades of history cast doubt on the claim. The Palestinian people are now ruled by the political wing of Hamas, a terrorist organization deemed to be one by the very agency Mr. Kerry runs–U.S. State Department.

Ahead of a defiant speech by outgoing

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks about the U.S. decision to allow the U.N. to condemn Israel for settlements in the West Bank. (Photo: Video Screenshot)

Secretary of State John Kerry speaks about the U.S. decision to allow the U.N. to condemn Israel for settlements in the West Bank. (Photo: Video Screenshot)

A defiant Secretary of State John Kerry defended the U.S. decision to allow the U.N. Security Council to condemn Israeli settlements last week. The outgoing secretary of state’s comments come as U.S.-Israeli relations reach their lowest point in decades, a trend that began almost immediately after President Barack Obama took office.

Numerous times Sec. Kerry referred to the Israeli settlements in the West Bank a “permanent occupation” and said the Obama administration abstained in the interest of a “just and lasting” peace.

“Friends need to tell each other the hard truths, and friendships require mutual respect,” Sec. Kerry said, adding the U.S. “did in fact vote in accordance with our values.”

Israeli officials described the move as a betrayal, but Sec. Kerry claimed that the U.S. was acting in the best interest of the Israeli nation. He argued a two-state solution remains the only way to a “just and lasting peace,” warning “that future is now in jeopardy.”

Mr. Kerry went on to tell Israelis that–under a one state solution–Israel can either be Jewish or democratic, a statement that received widespread criticism minutes after he uttered it.

“There are a similar number of Jews and Palestinians living between the Jordan River and Mediterranean Sea. They have a choice. They can choose to live together in one state or they can separate into two states,” he said. “But here is a fundamental reality, if the choice is one state, Israel can either be Jewish or democratic, it cannot be both.”

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu described the U.S. decision an “ambush,” and his government has accused the U.S. of orchestrating the vote on the resolution condemning the settlements, a charge People’s Pundit Daily has confirmed.

After years of violence, including rocket attacks, terror attacks and kidnappings via an elaborate network of underground tunnels, the Israeli government now views the settlements as a national security issue. At this point, Prime Minister Netanyahu, whom Sec. Kerry called the leader of the most right-wing government ever, is counting the days before President-elect Donald J. Trump is sworn into office.

The prime minister told Israel Army Radio that “Kerry’s intention is to chain President-elect Trump.” Ironically, that government was elected despite the U.S. president’s attempt to meddle in Israeli elections in order to defeat Prime Minister Netanyahu.

In Jan. 2015, a bipartisan Senate committee had been established to investigate the Obama administration’s use of several taxpayer-funded State Department grants to support OneVoice, a U.S.-based leftist activist organization started by five Democrats.

OneVoice received two taxpayer-funded grants from the U.S. State Department in the prior year totaling $200,000 and, as PPD previously reported, joined forces with the group V15 – who has a reputed mission of “anyone but Bibi” – to defeat Netanyahu.

The content of Sec. Kerry’s speech, which was provided to the Israeli government beforehand, has already proved to have unintended consequences. Ahead of the speech, the city planning commission in Jerusalem approved a plan to construct a three-story building for Jewish settlers in the predominantly Palestinian neighborhood of Silwan in East Jerusalem. The approval came after earlier vote was reportedly canceled at Prime Minister Netanyahu’s request.

A defiant Secretary of State John Kerry

pending-home-sales-sale-sign

Home for sale sign (Realtors) and potential exiting and pending home sales contract. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said Wednesday the Pending Home Sales Index (PHSI) fell in November, missing the 0.5% increase economists expected. The PHSI fell 2.5% to 107.3 in November from 110.0 in October.

“The budget of many prospective buyers last month was dealt an abrupt hit by the quick ascension of rates immediately after the election,” said Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist. “Already faced with climbing home prices and minimal listings in the affordable price range, fewer home shoppers in most of the country were successfully able to sign a contract.”

By following last month’s decrease in activity, the PHSI is now 0.4% lower than last November (107.7) and is at its lowest reading since January (105.4).

“Healthy local job markets amidst tight supply means many areas will remain competitive with prices on the rise. Those rushing to lock in a rate before they advance even higher will probably have few listings to choose from,” Mr. Yun added. “Some buyers will have to expand the area of their home search or be forced to delay in order to save a little more money for their down payment.”

In the Northeast, the PHSI inched higher by 0.6% to 97.5 in November, and is now 5.7% above a year ago. In the Midwest, the index fell 2.5% to 103.5 and is now 2.4% lower than it was in November 2015.

Pending home sales in the South fell 1.2% to 118.7 and are now 1.3% lower on a year-over-year basis. The index in the West also fell 6.7% to 101.0 and is now 1.0% below a year ago.

The National Association of Realtors (NAR) said

Vladimir-Putin-Recep-Tayyip-Erdoğan

Russian President Vladimir Putin, center, with Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan, left, and Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, right, at the re-opening of the Cathedral Mosque in Moscow on Wednesday, September 24, 2015. (Photo: AP)

Russia and Turkey have agreed on the terms of a ceasefire deal in Syria and hope to put the plan into effect by midnight, Turkey’s state-run Anadolu Agency reported. A source familiar with the negotiations said “terrorist organizations” will be excluded from the deal.

The two nations back opposing sides of the ongoing civil war in Syria, which has claimed the lives of several hundred thousand people. Turkey–as well as the U.S.–has supported factions of the Syrian rebels, many of which have ties to Sunni radical groups, while Russia has used its air forces to help Shiite Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Earlier this month, Turkey and Russia negotiated a ceasefire in rebel-held Aleppo to allow civilians to evacuate and, if the new ceasefire holds, peace talks would likely take place in Kazakhstan in mid-January.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan expressed a desire to involve fellow-Sunni nations Saudi Arabia and Qatar in the peace talks, a proposal wholeheartedly rejected by Shiite Iran. The regime in Tehran is an Assad ally that has also been involved in peace negotiations. Saudi Arabia and Qatar have worked with Turkey to support Sunni rebel groups fighting against Assad.

Turkey’s foreign minister also said Wednesday that a peaceful solution could not involve Assad. The last round of United Nations-sanctioned peace talks ended in April, after a tenuous cease-fire brokered by the United States and Russia fell apart.

Russia and Turkey have agreed on the

obama-georgetown-poverty-summit

From left, E.J. Dionne, Robert Putnam and Arthur Brooks listen to President Barack Obama speak Tuesday during the Catholic-Evangelical Leadership Summit on Overcoming Poverty at Georgetown University in Washington. (Photo: CNS/Tyler Orsburn)

If there was an award for the most dramatic political development of 2016, it would presumably be the election of Donald Trump. If there was an award for the best policy reform of 2016, my vote would be the constitutional spending cap in Brazil.

If there was an award for the greatest outburst of sensibility in 2016, it would be the landslide vote in Switzerland against a government-guaranteed income.

But what about an award for the most compelling article of 2016? Well, we still have a few days left in the year, so it’s theoretically possible that I’ll change my mind, but as of today the award would go to my friend Deirdre McCloskey for her December 23 column in the New York Times.

She addresses the fundamental issue of whether policy should be designed to reduce poverty or increase equality. Here’s some of what she wrote.

Eliminating poverty is obviously good. And, happily, it is already happening on a global scale. …We need to finish the job. But will we really help the poor by focusing on inequality? …The Princeton philosopher Harry Frankfurt put it this way: “Economic equality is not, as such, of particular moral importance.” Instead we should lift up the poor… Another eminent philosopher, John Rawls of Harvard, articulated what he called the Difference Principle: If the entrepreneurship of a rich person made the poorest better off, then the higher income of the entrepreneur was justified.

But Deirdre doesn’t limit herself to philosophical arguments.

She looks at the practical issues, such as whether governments have the ability (or motives!) to correctly re-slice the economic pie.

A practical objection to focusing on economic equality is that we cannot actually achieve it, not in a big society, not in a just and sensible way. …Cutting down the tall poppies uses violence for the cut. And you need to know exactly which poppies to cut. Trusting a government of self-interested people to know how to redistribute ethically is naïve. Another problem is that the cutting reduces the size of the crop. We need to allow for rewards that tell the economy to increase the activity earning them. …An all-wise central plan could force the right people into the right jobs. But such a solution, like much of the case for a compelled equality, is violent and magical. The magic has been tried, in Stalin’s Russia and Mao’s China. So has the violence.

Deirdre notes that people sometimes are drawn to socialism, in part because of how we interact with family and friends.

But you can’t extrapolate those experiences to broader society.

Many of us share socialism in sentiment, if only because we grew up in loving families with Mom as the central planner. Sharing works just fine in a loving household. But it is not how grown-ups get stuff.

When redistributionist principles are imposed on broader society, bad things happen.

As a matter of arithmetic, expropriating the rich to give to the poor does not uplift the poor very much. …And redistribution works only once. You can’t expect the expropriated rich to show up for a second cutting. In a free society, they can move to Ireland or the Cayman Islands. And the wretched millionaires can hardly re-earn their millions next year if the state has taken most of the money.

In other words, you get a shrinking pie rather than a growing pie. As Thomas Sowell also has observed, people don’t produce as much when the government seizes the fruits of their labor.

And in that kind of world, it’s theoretically possible that poor people will have a greater share, but they still wind up a smaller amount (moreover, in practice the government elite wind up with all the wealth).

So what’s the bottom line?

Deirdre cites South Korea as an example of a nation where poor people now enjoy much better lives thanks to growth, and she then asks readers the key question: Will the poor benefit more from the classical liberal principles of rule of law and free markets, or will they benefit more from coercive redistribution?

Her explanation is magnificent.

It is growth from exchange-tested betterment, not compelled or voluntary charity, that solves the problem of poverty. …Which do we want, a small one-time (though envy-and-anger-satisfying) extraction from the rich, or a free society of betterment, one that lifts up the poor by gigantic amounts? We had better focus directly on the equality that we actually want and can achieve, which is equality of social dignity and equality before the law. Liberal equality, as against the socialist equality of enforced redistribution, eliminates the worst of poverty. …To borrow from the heroes of my youth, Marx and Engels: Working people of all countries unite! You have nothing to lose but stagnation! Demand exchange-tested betterment in a liberal society. Some dare call it capitalism.

Glorious!

The resolution of this growth-vs-redistribution debate may very well determine the future of our nation. So, I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to say Deirdre’s column is the most important article of 2016.

Dan Mitchell addresses the fundamental issue of

Republican Donald Trump, right, delivers his speech on Election Eve in Manchester, New Hampshire, November 7, 2016. Statistician, left, depicted. (Photos: AP)

Republican Donald Trump, right, delivers his speech on Election Eve in Manchester, New Hampshire, November 7, 2016. Statistician, left, depicted. (Photos: AP)

There will no doubt be numerous columns written this week about the failure of the mainstream media and political pundits to understand and predict the rise of President-elect Donald J. Trump. There will be those who will take their bows and others who will make their excuses, justifiably and not on both accounts.

Perhaps this will serve as our small contribution to that effort. But while the American people have long-perceived the media as out-of-touch, corrupt and leftwing advocates, 2016 was the year everyone found out why People’s Pundit Daily was founded.

At People’s Pundit Daily, we were and remain very concerned about the monopoly the political left has silently enjoyed in the polling industry and election forecast business. Whether they pretend to be objective or openly partisan, PPD is the only outfit of its kind not dominated by liberal Democrats or the media establishment in some capacity. We are the first pollster-election projection combo, ever.

That means we don’t only analyze Big Data, but we also collect it.

And 2016 was the year Big Data beat Big Media on performance, analysis and predictions in the U.S. presidential election, U.S. Senate elections and down-ballot contests. It is also the year Big Media pollsters finally lost the public trust and, whether they know it or not, 2016 marked the beginning of the end for them.

Big Data operations like People’s Pundit Daily, through normal and natural market forces, will replace the dinosaurs of the past.

From the primaries to the general election, we offered our regular readers, passing news consumers and political junkies a completely different assessment of the 2016 election season. In the end, despite overwhelming criticism, it proved to be the accurate assessment of the election and reality.

Let’s take a look at the record and remind everyone just how much of an outlier we were at PPD.

The Republican Primary

PPD split early and hard from the conventional wisdom echoed in Big Media. On Feb. 10, just one day after the New Hampshire primary, I wrote the following:

At PPD, we deal in facts and data, and our post-New Hampshire primary analysis is nothing short of a reality check for candidates, pundits and the media. That being said, right off the bat, we implore you to ignore those media pundits and take heed to what we will stress here.

The previous day, I laid the foundation for our primary analysis by taking on The Fix, run by Chris Cillizza at The Washington Post, which ran the headline “Don’t sleep on Ted Cruz. The next five weeks look very, very good for him.”

Aaron Blake, the author of this particular piece, argued that “moving forward it’s easy to see how the Granite State could one day look like a very minor bump along Cruz’s path to the Republican presidential nomination.” The argument basically held that New Hampshire was far more secular and “the next few weeks of the GOP race look a whole lot more like Iowa than New Hampshire. And that is fantastic for Cruz.”

Readers can go back and read the correct analysis in more detail, but suffice it to say that argument was simply historically inaccurate. Further, I stressed on more occasions than I could count that Mr. Trump’s appeal was always attitudinal, not ideology and PPD was the only model to predict he would sweep all The Palmetto State’s delegates.

And he did, dominating self-described conservatives, very conservatives and white evangelicals, all blocs Cruz was hoping and expecting to consolidate. While Nate Silver, the glorified poll-reader who is marketed by Big Media as a Big Data guru, was giving Mr. Trump a 5% chance of winning the GOP nomination, PPD gave readers the facts and Mr. Trump a significant edge.

We believe Cruz will be extremely competitive, but a combination of Trump’s strengths among Cruz’s core target voters, momentum and the dynamics of the field, makes it crystal clear the frontrunner is well-positioned to take the top spot in South Carolina on Feb. 20.

The rest is history.

The General Election

We were bombarded by readers–some of whom followed our 2014 debut when we emerged as the most accurate election forecast model–asking what was in the secret sauce. There isn’t one answer to that question, but the in-house Big Data polling operation and analysis is a major contributor. As I pointed out back in May in the article “Nate Silver is Wrong About Trump, Again. He’s Wrong a Lot. Here’s Why,” I tried to warn him and his cult-like followers that he was about to be blindsided.

U.S. political history is riddled with endless examples of political shifts. Successful election forecasters should not only know that the map on the presidential level isn’t static but also learn how to recognize when the map is shifting. Hypotheses centering on Blue Walls–and, even Red Walls once upon a time–are destined to fail, eventually.

Our in-house polling operation at PPD is how we identified that political shift. Unlike Nate Silver, we talk to actual Americans in Main Street America and don’t exclusively rely on third-party pollsters.

When he gave President-elect Trump a 25% chance of defeating Hillary Clinton, we saw all the hallmarks of a major political realignment, one that had been trending for years and ultimately gave him a not-so hidden advantage. Whether it came to a head in 2016 or just to everyone else’s attention is yet to be determined. We suspect it is the former, but that’s another article and another analysis.

So, we began to release the results of our Big Data polling operation, which was unsurprisingly met with heavy criticism and pushback.

Our Outside-the-Beltway PPD Poll Creamed Gold Standard’ Pollsters

The U.S. Election Atlas erroneously claimed they reviewed methodologies, data and decided we weren’t worth the weight of random sample polls conducted by Big Media. For the record, we were never contacted by anyone over there and would happily have enlightened them on the reasons we published very different and, consequently, more accurate results.

The final PPD Keystone State Battleground Poll released on Nov. 6 found Mr. Trump taking 48.4% of the vote to Mrs. Clinton’s 47.8%, a statistical tie that nearly nailed the vote exactly.

The final results: Mr. Trump got 48.8% of the vote to 47.6% for Mrs. Clinton. It doesn’t get much closer than that and there wasn’t a single Big Media poll that found Mrs. Clinton trailing in the state, which no Republican presidential candidate had been able to carry for roughly 3 decades.

In Florida, home to PPD and where we pegged Gov. Rick Scott’s 2014 reelection within 5,000 votes, the final PPD Sunshine State Battleground Poll found Mr. Trump leading by 1.8%. He not only won by 1.4% but our demographics were spot on. A few days before the election, while all the favorite Big Media leftwing pundits were misreading early vote data, we told you Mrs. Clinton didn’t stand a chance. Due to post-election attempts at revisionist history, we recently reiterated why Big Data always disagreed.

In Michigan and Wisconsin, the final PPD Battleground State Polls found the two candidates tied but leaning to the Republican nominee by less than 0.5%.

In Colorado, the final PPD Rocky Mountain Battleground State Poll found Mrs. Clinton leading Mr. Trump by 3 points, 48% to 45%. She won by 3 points, 47% to 44%.

The final PPD Tar Heel State Battleground Poll found Mr. Trump leading by 3 points, 49% to 46%. He won by 4 points, 51% to 47%.

We are frequently asked why RealClearPolitics.com or HuffPollster won’t aggregate our polls. After providing all the requested information to the latter, we were told they would. In the end, they never did and, at this point, we are starting to agree with that decision albeit for different reasons.

The PPD Poll is more than just a poll, as our subscribers have learned. Following the 2012 national polling debacle, I began to open my mind to the possibility the polling industry needed to evolve. Post-election research, which I elaborated on back on Oct. 2 in “Defense of the LA Times Poll,” began to validate some of my suspicions. A study from Columbia corroborated our own research, which concluded wild swings pollsters found in 2012 weren’t real, but rather “artifacts” of the polls themselves and their sample errors.

Low response rates, sample response bias, flawed methodologies and corruption, all contributed to one polling embarrassment after another at home and aboard. In 2014, we adopted a more sophisticated Big Data operation, recognized the potential of the Rand Corporation model, incorporated what we decided we should and it paid off.

The PPD Election Projection Model ended up clobbering the competition–i.e. Nate Silver at FiveThirtyEight, Nate Cohen at Upshot, The Fix and just about everywhere else.

Big Media pollsters were almost universally stunned by the Republican wave. The one and only adjustment we made to the model post-2014 was to diminish the importance of Big Media polls, a call we made after their weighted influence caused us to miss the mark on the U.S. Senate race in North Carolina. They reduced the influence of our own results, which turned out to be more accurate.

In 2016, we didn’t make the same mistake and a small Big Data operation in Florida crushed Big Media and their dino-pollsters on Election Day. The PPD Election Projection Model was again the most accurate election forecaster in 2016 and, overall, put out the most accurate polling before Election Day. We’re claiming that mantel until someone else performs well enough to take it back from us.

That will no doubt eventually happen. But if the last few weeks are any indicator, it’s safe to say they have no intention of evolving or making an attempt to earn back the public trust. That means business in 2017 and beyond should be very good to People’s Pundit Daily.

2016 was the year Big Data beat

What do Andy Johnson, Anthony Smelley, the Hammond family, Charlie Engle, Tammy Cooper, Nancy Black, Russ Caswell, Jacques Wajsfelner, Jeff Councelller, Eric Garner, Martha Boneta, James Slatic, Carole Hinders, Salvatore Culosi, and James Lieto, as well as the Sierra Pacific Company and the entire Meitev family have in common?

They are all victims of brutal, unfair, capricious, and evil government actions. And I challenge anyone to read their stories and not feel at least some degree of outrage at their mistreatment.

And now we’re going to add Corey Statham to the list. The New York Times has an all-too-typical report of government greed and callousness.

Corey Statham had $46 in his pockets when he was arrested in Ramsey County, Minn., and charged with disorderly conduct. He was released two days later, and the charges were dismissed. But the county kept $25 of Mr. Statham’s money as a “booking fee.” …He did get a debit card for the remaining $21. But there was no practical way to extract his cash without paying some kind of fee. Among them: $1.50 a week for “maintenance” of the unwanted card, starting after 36 hours; $2.75 for using an A.T.M. to withdraw money; $3 for transferring the balance to a bank account; and $1.50 for checking the balance. …Mr. Statham is represented by Michael A. Carvin, a prominent conservative lawyer who…said the county’s motives were not rooted in solicitude for the people it had arrested. “Revenue-starved local governments are increasingly turning toward fees like Ramsey County’s in order to bridge their budgetary gaps,” he wrote in a Supreme Court brief. …“Providing a profit motive to make arrests,” he said, “gives officers an incentive to make improper arrests.” …$25 is not a lot of money — unless you are poor. It represents almost half a day’s work at the federal minimum wage, a federal judge wrote in a dissent in another case on booking fees.

I have no idea whether Mr. Statham is a sympathetic victim. But even if he’s a total jerk, that doesn’t change the fact that people who interact with the legal system should not be subject to fines or fees without a conviction.

This is yet another example of innocent people victimized by “policing for profit,” which notoriously happens with civil asset forfeiture.

And at the risk of sounding like a closet leftist, it bothers me when poor people and rich people face the same fines. I don’t know Statham’s situation, but there are plenty of low-income people who can suffer severe financial consequences when they have an unfortunate encounter with local law enforcement. Maybe we should be like Switzerland and proportionately adjust fines based on wealth. I don’t suggest that because I want local governments to have more money. Instead, I’m thinking such a policy would both make the law more equal and give the rest of us a strong incentive to fight against thuggish revenue-raising tactics.

P.S. I’m obviously on the side of Statham’s lawyer, but I can’t resist correcting something said by Michael Carvin. I’ve never looked at the numbers for Ramsey County, but, based on nationwide fiscal data for state and local governments, I will say with 99 percent confidence that Ramsey County is not “revenue-starved.” In the interests of accuracy, Mr. Carvin in the future should refer to local politicians as being “revenue-hungry.”

P.P.S. On a separate topic, here’s a nice reminder of the difference between the private sector and the government.

A man in Pomona was upset after a postal carrier was seen on surveillance video throwing a small package on his doorstep, but a surprise hero was also captured on footage. Brian Mundy sent the video to our sister station in Los Angeles using #abc7eyewitness. In it, you see the U.S. Postal Service carrier carelessly tossing the package. Much to Mundy’s surprise, moments later, a FedEx driver – wearing a reindeer hat – is seen gently putting down two packages. That driver even picks up the small box from the USPS carrier and gently puts it on top of the rest.

It’s all on video if you click on the story link. Yes, this is just an anecdote. And, yes, I’m sure there are plenty of bad FedEx employees and wonderful Postal Service employees. I’m mostly sharing the story for amusement value.

But I suspect John Stossel was right when he explained that, as a general rule, the private sector will do a better job.

Here's a list of people who are

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