Today in news which will not shock you:
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/cpwjxx5eyn1o

Survey which claimed evangelical Christianity was on the rise in UK found to have been fraudulently manipulated by Evangelical Christians.

I know. My surprise was unconstrained.
😑

Church attendance report pulled after YouGov finds 'fraudulent' responses

The original report claimed a rise in young people attending church in England and Wales.

@CrypticMirror Where does this article say it was fraudulently manipulated by evangelical Christians? YouGov carried out the research, they're a reputable secular polling company. People paid by YouGov to fill in the survey misrepresented themselves. Unless you've got evidence those people were somehow selected or manipulated by evangelicals, you should correct your claim.
@jdonoghue @CrypticMirror the evangelical Christians were happy to go along with the idea that attendances were dramatically up even though they must have known that they were actually declining. That sounds pretty deceptive.

@satsuma @jdonoghue @CrypticMirror Very few people have much of a sense of what might be happening in places beyond their local area. If you're a regular churchgoer, you might be very aware of trends in numbers in your own congregation, might be vaguely aware of what numbers are like in a few other churches nearby or which your congregation has links to, but would likely have little idea of what trends might be happening nationally. For this, you need national level data gathering organisations, like YouGov, which is where fault seems to lie in this case.

The only ones within the church who might have access to national-level figures to question the data would be national denominational bodies, but even then, they would only have access to (often pretty patchy/poor quality) data from their own denomination, rather than across denominations (lots of silo-ing happens in churches, with relatively little co-ordination between denominational bodies).

And then there are cross-denominational parachurch organisations that might also have a bit of a sense of what is happening more broadly, though without much granular data, who might have had anecdotal reasons to question the data. And in this case, one of the most relevant bodies did precisely that.