Yeah, that's not happening now:
In May, the pollster for Al Gore's
presidential bid in 2000 and John Edwards's in 2004 and 2008, Harrison
Hickman, took the stand in the federal criminal case against Edwards
over alleged campaign finance violations stemming from payments to
support Edwards's mistress.
Under oath, Hickman admitted that in the final weeks of Edwards's
2008 bid, Hickman cherry-picked public polls to make the candidate seem
viable, promoted surveys that Hickman considered unreliable, and sent
e-mails to campaign aides, Edwards supporters and reporters which argued
that the former senator was still in the hunt —even though Hickman had
already told Edwards privately that he had no real chance of winning the Democratic nomination.
"They were pounding on me for positive information. You know, where
is some good news we can share with people? We were monitoring all these
polls and I was sending the ones that were most favorable because
[campaign aides] wanted to share them with reporters," Hickman testified
on May 14 at the trial in Greensboro, N.C. "We were not finding very
much good news and I was trying to give them what I could find."
Hickman testified that when circulating the polls, he didn't much
care if they were accurate. "I didn't necessarily take any of these as
for—as you would say, for the truth of the matter. I took them more as
something that could be used as propaganda for the campaign," the
veteran pollster said. http://www.politico.com/blogs/under-the-radar/2012/10/a-pollster-under-oath-137100.html
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