Nonresponse Bias: How the Silent Majority Determined an Election, and Sunk a Beloved Writer | by Sachin Date | Aug, 2024

An intro to a statistical bias that makes its brutal presence felt by an entire absence of information

On a grey November night, President Franklin Delano Roosevelt settled in entrance of the radio at Springwood, some 300 miles northeast of the White Home.

An aerial view of Springwood, Hyde Park, NYC, USA wanting southwest (June 6, 1932) Supply: Franklin D. Roosevelt Presidential Library & Museum (License: public area picture)

Nestled throughout the rolling wooded hills on the east financial institution of the Hudson, Springwood was Franklin Roosevelt’s lifelong house. It was the middle of the world for the President. A spot of familiarity and luxury that he returned to time and time once more all through the twelve years of his era-defining presidency.¹

Wanting into the residing Room, West, of Springwood because it was in July 1941. Supply: U. S. Library of Congress/Wikimedia. (public area {photograph})

On that November night, Roosevelt and his household had planted themselves in entrance of the radio for a particular purpose.

It was the night of November 3, 1936.