Nieman Foundation at Harvard
HOME
          
LATEST STORY
How can we reach beyond the local news choir? Spotlight PA’s founding editor has ideas
ABOUT                    SUBSCRIBE
March 19, 2025, 12:28 p.m.
LINK: www.nytimes.com  ➚   |   Posted by: Laura Hazard Owen   |   March 19, 2025

When ABC shut down FiveThirtyEight early this month, the site’s publicly available polling databases — like a presidential approval rating tracker — shut down, too. Many news outlets, including The New York Times and FiveThirtyEight founder Nate Silver’s Silver Bulletin, had relied on the data for election coverage, and people worried about its disappearance.

“Collecting and maintaining a database of public polls is a lot of work, requiring diligence, meticulousness, and dealing with constant complaints about edge cases from readers and pollsters,” Silver wrote. “But it’s also a public service. Polling has its challenges, but I believe it’s vital in a democracy.”

Luckily, the data has been saved: The New York Times is picking up where FiveThirtyEight left off and has “begun a new effort to track public opinion surveys, starting by collecting all polls on President Trump’s job approval…building on the work of the politics website 538,” William P. Davis, the Times’ director of election data analytics, wrote Monday.

Our goal is to ensure that this resource, which is a foundational tool for many journalists and researchers, remains updated long-term. The data will be made available free for anybody to use as they wish, so long as they provide attribution to The Times. (If you’re still using data collected by 538, you may still need to give it attribution as well.)

To make the transition as easy as possible, we are providing the data in about the same format as 538 did. There are some differences, which are noted at the bottom of this page.

You can see the Times’ polling tracker here.

Show tags
 
Join the 60,000 who get the freshest future-of-journalism news in our daily email.
How can we reach beyond the local news choir? Spotlight PA’s founding editor has ideas
In the wake of the 2024 election, where “democracy” was not a top issue for most voters, local news messaging focused on democracy may not suffice to build the broad coalition essential to give local news in the U.S. a sustainable future.
Robert W. McChesney, America’s leading left-wing critic of corporate media, has died
After studying the early days of radio, McChesney developed a holistic critique of media structures that exposed how open they were to manipulation by those in power.
“Some hard and important lessons”: One of the most promising local news nonprofits looks back — and ahead
The National Trust for Local News is a nonprofit organization with a mission so important even its harshest critics want it to succeed.