Zogby already had been in the polling business for several years when his results in 1994 New York elections confounded his competitors but proved to be right in the

end. Big-time national recognition came, however, only after the votes were counted in 1996 election. From early in the campaign, his polls predicted Bill Clinton would win by a much smaller margin than any of the other major pollsters were showing. Their derision grew as the gap widened.

The Zogby poll's final numbers, however, were uncannily accurate because he not only got Clinton's eight-point winning margin right, but also was the only pollster who got the numbers for Bob Dole and Ross Perot right as well. Most of his chagrined competitors, like Richard Morin of The Washington Post, quoted above, were

gracious. Others, like The New York Times , whose CBS/New York Times final poll had predicted Clinton would win by an 18-point margin, were not. It printed a compilation of final polling figures from different organizations that, by obscuring the extent of Zogby's triumph, masked how far off base the final CBS/Times poll results had been.

Other daily newspapers were less grudging, even if they had printed the less accurate figures of other organizations. Wrote Jim Norman in USA Today, from which the figures in the accompanying box were taken:

"In a year when almost every poll overestimated President Clinton's 8 percentage point margin of victory, one pollster was on the money. John Zogby, a newcomer to presidential polling, projected Clinton would win 49 percent of the vote to Bob Dole's 41 percent, Ross Perot's 8 percent, and 2 percent for others. Those were the exact outcomes of Tuesday's vote."

"Zogby, a maverick, is the landslide election winner of the polling contest of 1996,"

wrote the Seattle Post Intelligencer. "Not only did he call this year's presidential race right, this David also beat the Goliaths in 1992."

Deborah Orin, Washington bureau chief for the New York Post, said, I have now seen him do three races that almost everyone but him got wrong. I'm a great fan, but he has lots of great fans." immediately after the election she reported: "Only two polls came close - Reuters pollster John Zogby... and the 'Hotline' newsletter poll... Zogby also came closest of any pollster in this year's New Jersey Senate race, where he polled for the Post and predicted Rep. Bob Torricelli would win by 8 points.

"At one point Zogby recalls being told that Clinton political director Doug Sosnik had suggested the pollster should hire 'a professional.' Now Zogby is laughing. The professional was there all along, but I guess they couldn't find anybody with the credentials to see it,' he said."

Wrote the Cleveland Plain Dealer: "[Washington professionals love John Zogby, whose polls for the Reuters news service provided shreds of good (and, as it turns out, accurate tidings during the campaign. Republican parents will be naming their children Zogby for a year."

Zogby, whose brother, James Zogby, is president of the Arab American Institute in Washington, DC, was on the staff of the American Arab Anti-Discrimination committee (ADC) also in Washington, DC, before he returned to New York to open his polling company. Although his latest poll results were welcomed by the Republicans, he personally is a liberal Democrat. He attributes his success to his efforts to base his results on a more accurate portrait of Americans who actually vote. He uses screening questions to ferret out the voters, and discards interviews with all others.


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