Here are my updated demographic splits in average crosstabs of live-interview national polls, w/ new @QuinnipiacPoll thrown into the October mix.
A few breathtaking splits:
- Biden now +25 w/ women
- Biden now +10 w/ seniors
In my view, the biggest "tell" Trafalgar etc. are off the mark? Private, district-level GOP polling conducted to make spending decisions backs up what we're seeing in averages of live-interview polls: Trump doing terribly w/ college whites/women into October.
The only group where we're seeing improvement in Trump's margin vs. '16? Hispanic voters.
Today, live-interview average has Trump down 27 points, vs. 38 points per @UpshotNYT's average of final '16 polls.
In 2020, final polls showed a 20 point gender gap: men Trump +6, women Clinton +14. Exit polls pegged ultimate gap at 24 points.
Today's gender canyon is a gargantuan 27 points: men Trump +2, women Biden +25.
Bottom line: 2020 polls depict an electorate polarizing along gender lines, slightly depolarizing along racial lines and whites polarized about the same along educational lines.
And, Biden has made progress w/ critical battleground groups (seniors, non-college whites, etc.)
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More people have now early voted in TX than the number of people who voted for Donald Trump in TX in 2016.
(Disclaimer: this suggests voter interest/intensity is way higher than in the past and we're headed for massive turnout - as we are everywhere - but not much beyond that.)
TX early/mail votes cast so far in 2020, as share of total 2016 votes cast:
Clinton-won counties: 60%
Trump-won counties: 59%
Another reminder you shouldn't read a partisan advantage from huge turnout. Both parties' bases highly motivated.
Brief thread: here's why I don't put a ton of stock into the *overall* pro-R registration trend in FL from '16 to '20. Take the 33 least populous of FL's 67 counties, which are mostly rural and located in the north/panhandle (aka the Deep South)...
In November 2016, these 33 counties collectively had a narrow 42%-40% GOP voter registration advantage. But here's how they *voted:*
Trump: 369,045 (67%)
Clinton: 170,871 (31%)
Btw, Trump's statewide margin was 112,911 votes.
Fast forward to 2020: the final data shows the GOP voter registration advantage in these 33 counties has grown to 48%-32%.
These aren't new Trump voters. These are existing Trump voters formalizing their party change from D to R.
Just in: final FL voter reg. data. Since this March's primary, here are each party's net gains:
GOP: +344,465
Dem: +197,821
NPA/Other: +197,818
Compare to the same period in '16:
GOP: +274,207
Dem: +307,961
NPA/Other: +220,857
Trump's '16 FL margin: 112,911 votes
For reference, here's the story I wrote for @NBCNews a few weeks ago putting the GOP's recent registration success in FL/NC/PA in context: nbcnews.com/politics/2020-…
Here's the final Nov. 2020 FL voter breakdown by party and race (14,441,869 registrants):
New Marist/PBS & NBC/WSJ polls bring us to a critical mass of October live-interview national polls, and to me Biden's gains appear to be pretty even across the board (except for Black voters, where there wasn't much room to grow).
To be clear, "final 2016 polls" are via @Nate_Cohn/@UpshotNYT's estimates and this chart is my running average of 2020 national live-interview poll crosstabs, including NYT/Siena, CNN, ABC/WaPo, NBC/WSJ, Fox, Marist/PBS, Quinnipiac, Monmouth, Suffolk and Grinnell/Selzer.
One fascinating takeaway is that Biden's 12% lead over Trump is the same size as in June/July, but:
1) far fewer undecideds today (54%-42% vs. 52%-40%) 2) Biden's average lead has expanded by 4% since June/July among seniors & Hispanics
New @pewresearch poll: Biden leads 69%-27% among those who plan to vote by mail, Trump leads 63%-31% among those who plan to vote on Election Day. pewresearch.org/politics/2020/…
Also interesting: @pewresearch finds that of the 5% of RVs who support Jorgensen/Hawkins, they would lean Trump over Biden 54%-42% if forced to choose - suggesting their presence might actually aid Biden?
Sorry, should have noted Biden also leading 55%-40% among early in person, per @pewresearch.
My new @nytimes op-ed: meet the 10 counties in America that hold the key to President Trump's fate - and illustrate why he's in such deep trouble. nytimes.com/2020/10/06/opi…
Today, I'd rate all ten of these top bellwether counties as either "toss ups" or "lean Biden:"
1. Maricopa, AZ 2. Pinellas, FL 3. Peach, GA 4. Marshall, IA 5. Kent, MI 6. New Hanover, NC 7. Wood, OH 8. Erie, PA 9. Collin, TX 10. Sauk, WI
These places don't fit one stereotype: they run the gamut from meatpacking hubs to military bases and peach orchards to yacht-dense retiree havens.
But one thing they have in common: their votes will matter a whole lot more than most Americans' votes.