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Frank Newport

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Parent: Gallup (company) Hop 5
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Frank Newport
NameFrank Newport
Birth date1942
Birth placeUnited States
OccupationPollster, author, researcher
EmployerGallup
Known forPublic opinion research, polling methodology, Gallup Poll

Frank Newport Frank Newport is an American pollster and author known for his leadership of the Gallup Poll and contributions to public opinion research. He has served as a director and editor for opinion-tracking programs and has written on polling methods, presidential approval, and public attitudes. Newport's work intersected with major institutions and figures in American political and social life.

Early life and education

Newport was born in the United States and pursued higher education that prepared him for a career in quantitative social research. He studied at institutions offering programs in psychology and statistics, receiving training that connected him to methodological traditions associated with survey research at organizations like Gallup (company), Roper Center for Public Opinion Research, and university centers focusing on empirical measurement. His academic background linked him to scholars and fields associated with behavioral measurement, connecting to figures at institutions such as Princeton University, University of Michigan, and Columbia University where survey research has deep roots.

Career

Newport's professional career is most closely associated with Gallup (company), where he held senior roles including editor and director of polling programs. During his tenure he led teams that monitored presidential approval ratings, electoral preferences, and social indicators, placing his work alongside long-running series such as the Gallup Poll and comparable projects at the Pew Research Center and the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research. Newport's analyses were widely cited in outlets including The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Economist, and broadcast organizations such as CNN, BBC, and NPR. He collaborated with statisticians, political scientists, and journalists affiliated with institutions like Harvard University, Stanford University, and Yale University to advance public understanding of opinion trends.

Polling methodology and contributions

Newport contributed to methodological debates about sampling, weighting, and trend analysis that involved practitioners linked with bodies such as the American Association for Public Opinion Research, American Statistical Association, and academic departments at University of Chicago and University of California, Berkeley. He addressed issues of telephone sampling, random-digit dialing, and the transition to cellphone and internet modes, participating in conferences sponsored by organizations like the National Science Foundation and publishing findings that engaged with research from Pew Research Center and academic centers at Ohio State University. Newport's work on presidential job approval, issue salience, and measurement reliability informed practices used by polling operations during presidential campaigns involving candidates tracked by the Federal Election Commission and reported by news organizations including Reuters and Associated Press.

Major publications and works

Newport authored and coauthored numerous articles and reports for outlets and compilations associated with Gallup (company)],] academic journals, and edited volumes. His writings covered presidential approval history, electoral behavior, and public attitudes toward institutions, and were cited alongside works by scholars at Brookings Institution, Cato Institute, and American Enterprise Institute. Newport contributed to books and monographs that engaged with historical polling series such as those maintained by Roper Center for Public Opinion Research and comparative studies produced by international research bodies like the European Social Survey.

Awards and recognition

Newport received recognition from professional associations including awards and honors linked to the American Association for Public Opinion Research and commendations from media and policy organizations that monitor polling quality, such as acknowledgments from editors at USA Today, Time (magazine), and academic peers at institutions like Indiana University and University of Pennsylvania. His leadership at a major polling organization placed him among notable pollsters whose work is chronicled alongside figures associated with Roper Center for Public Opinion Research and the history of public-opinion measurement.

Personal life and legacy

Newport's career left a legacy in the practice of national public-opinion polling, influencing how approval ratings and electoral preferences are tracked and presented by organizations such as Gallup (company), Pew Research Center, and news outlets including The New York Times and The Washington Post. His personal life has been kept private, while his professional contributions continue to be cited by researchers at universities like Harvard University, Stanford University, and by institutions maintaining archival polling series such as the Roper Center for Public Opinion Research.

Category:American pollsters Category:Gallup (company) people