Like the New York Giants trying to fix their offensive line issues, among other things, Democratic pollsters have been working for years trying to make sure they can nail their projections. It hasn’t been successful. Donald J. Trump wrecked the ship in more ways than one, with two presidential elections where these firms had underestimated the former president’s support. Joe Biden barely won the 2020 race, now an open secret since Democratic donors and party bosses rolled that old man off a cliff in July. At this point in the race four years ago, Biden was ahead of Trump by seven points. Kamala Harris, who was coronated last week after the Biden coup, is trailing Trump by the same amount. Harris’ takeover has injected more enthusiasm into the Democratic Party base, and the cash flows back into the war chests. Still, Democratic pollsters are offering a fair warning that Harris’ position, while better than Biden’s, isn’t good. In their models, she’s tied with Trump in the swing states, though methods used to gauge voter preferences show that it’s still Trump’s election to lose. Yet, some of the reasons for their panicking are somewhat entertaining. In short, Democrats still struggle with the low-propensity voters, the folks they view as idiots, coming out of the woodwork during presidential cycles (via Politico):
And these pollsters conceded that the “Wisconsin project” cannot be replicated on the timeline we have right now in the 2024 cycle. Liberals know a tight race breaks for the GOP because this is all about the Electoral College. Second, let’s look at some of these surveys now that RFK Jr. has quit the 2024 race. Mr. Kennedy dropped out last Friday and endorsed Trump; his supporters are likelier to support the former president. We shall see, but the polling issue circles back to something that the political class fails to accept: the Trump coalition is diverse, it's dispersed efficiently geographically, and our system favors candidates who can string together coalitions of this nature. Trending on Townhall Videos |
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