There have been an absolute deluge of national and swing
state polls in September, and they tell the same tale: Joe Biden is firmly in control. The race
has not tightened one bit; if anything, it has moved marginally in Biden’s
direction.
Though mail-in voting had already begun, and in-person
voting starts in three days in three states, much can still change. We have three debates ahead of us, and
endless news cycles – so think of this as a “snapshot,” not a “prediction.”
But almost all of the latest news has been favorable to
Biden. First there was the Atlantic article,
in which Trump was quoted calling World War I soldiers buried outside of Paris “losers." While the White House was still issuing furious denials, Trump then dissed his own
generals for pushing for wars to line the pockets of defense contractors. Then came twin disclosures that Biden had
shattered fundraising records by raising $365 million in the month (dwarfing
Trump’s $210 million) and that the
Trump campaign was, in fact, cash poor at the head of the stretch drive.
This was followed by the initial tidbits of
Bob Woodward’s new book, “Rage” (out today) in which he interviewed Trump 19 times -- on
tape! The tapes revealed exactly how
badly Trump had misled the public about COVID-19 back in February; we now know
exactly “what the President knew” and “when he knew it.” Neither those revelations, nor holding indoor rallies with no masks or distancing, is going to help Trump on the largest issue of the campaign: his handling of COVID-19. Biden is already winning on this issue handily, and only 40% of Americans approve of Trump's COVID response, while 56% disapprove.
The Trump administration has managed some recent good news in the Middle
East, with first the UAE and then Bahrain entering into normalized relations
with Israel. But all in all, the first
two weeks in September had Trump on the defensive, stanching wounds largely of
the self-inflicted variety.
Before we dig into the latest numbers, this would be an opportune
time to remind Democrats of our constant refrain – our warning label:
WARNING: No matter how good the numbers look
at any given time, the Democrats will not win any election unless they work
hard to earn it – registering voters, calling, texting, donating – throughout
the summer and fall, up to and including Election Day.
ODDS
Based on the latest polls (and other factors, including
judgment), our BTRTN models now show that Biden has a 81% chance of winning the
presidency if the election were held all at once, today. This is slightly up from the 79% we
calculated a week ago. This chart
includes our most recent Senate and House probabilities of the Democrats
controlling the Senate and the House, and indicate the potential for a
trifecta.
Election Odds of Democrats' Winning/Controlling
|
||
President
|
Senate
|
House
|
81%
|
65%
|
99%
|
Electoral Votes
|
Composition/(Dem Change)
|
Composition/(Dem Change)
|
334 Biden/204 Trump
|
50 Dem*/50 GOP (D +3)
|
251 Dems/187 GOP (Dems +18)
|
*Including
Independents who caucus with the Democrats.
Also assumes Biden wins the presidency, which would require the
Democrats to get to 50 seats to control the Senate.
|
NATIONAL POLLS
There have been 14 national polls thus far in September,
seven in the first week, and seven in the second. They have barely fluttered versus the August
polls, with Biden maintaining a +7 percentage point lead. Biden is now averaging 50% of the vote in
those polls, on average. Keep in mind,
considering the structural advantages the GOP has in the Electoral College, a “true”
lead for Biden requires a 4-point advantage to carry through to the swing
states. At +7, Biden is clearly ahead
and in a reasonably strong position.
TRUMP VS BIDEN HEAD-TO-HEAD NATIONAL POLLS
|
||||||
Month (# polls)
|
Jun
(26)
|
Jul
(20)
|
Aug
(30)
|
Wk Ending
Sep 5 (7)
|
Wk
ending Sep 12 (7)
|
|
Biden
|
50
|
49
|
49
|
50
|
50
|
|
Trump
|
41
|
41
|
42
|
43
|
43
|
|
Diff
|
9
|
8
|
7
|
7
|
7
|
SWING STATES
There have been 45 polls in the 14 swings states and two
swing districts in the month of September, and Joe Biden has led in 37 of
them. Trump has led in just six, and
there have been two ties.
Based on this fresh batch of polls, we have made three
BTRTN ratings changes since our September 7 snapshot, and each has been in Joe
Biden’s direction.
Minnesota
|
D
Lean
|
D
Likely
|
Arizona
|
D
TU
|
D
Lean
|
Nebraska
2nd District
|
R
TU
|
D
TU
|
Team Trump has long sought to put Minnesota in play, but
with three new polls all in the Biden +8/+9, those hopes would seem to be
fading. Arizona has emerged as a potential
flip state, a safety valve that gives Biden more paths to 270 than simply
re-flipping the states Trump flipped in 2016.
There has been little recent polling in Nebraska’s 2nd district, but it is going Biden’s way, and any electoral vote is worth having,
especially since there are 269-269 scenarios.
There are now eight true Toss Up states, and Biden does not
have to win a single one of them to win the election. He has a solid 210 from his “blue wall”
entities (states or districts), another 16 from three “likely” entities, and 63
more from six leaning states: Arizona,
Michigan, Nebraska’s 2nd District, Nevada, Pennsylvania and
Wisconsin. Trump won all of them (except
Nevada) in 2016, by the slimmest of margins, but Biden now leads in each by 4-7
points.
BTRTN PRESIDENT SNAPSHOT
|
||
BTRTN Rating
|
Entities
|
Electoral Votes
|
DEM TOTAL
|
29
|
334
|
Dem Solid
|
18
|
210
|
Dem Likely
|
3
|
16
|
Dem Lean
|
5
|
63
|
Dem Toss-up
|
3
|
45
|
GOP Toss-up
|
5
|
79
|
GOP Lean
|
0
|
0
|
GOP Likely
|
0
|
0
|
GOP Solid
|
22
|
125
|
GOP TOTAL
|
27
|
204
|
Here is a rundown of every state or district.
BTRTN 2020 PRESIDENTIAL SNAPSHOT
|
||||
States
|
2020 Electoral Votes
|
2016 Margin
|
Swing State Poll Avg
|
BTRTN Rating
|
Solid Dem (18 states or districts,
210 electoral votes): California, Colorado, Connecticut, DC, Delaware,
Hawaii, Illinois, Maine 1st District, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New
Mexico, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Rhode Island, Vermont, Virginia,
Washington
|
||||
Maine
|
2
|
Clinton
+3
|
Biden
+12
|
D
Likely
|
New Hampshire
|
4
|
Clinton
+0.3
|
Biden
+8
|
D
Likely
|
Minnesota
|
10
|
Clinton
+2
|
Biden
+8
|
D
Likely
|
Wisconsin
|
10
|
Trump
+1
|
Biden
+7
|
D
Lean
|
Michigan
|
16
|
Trump
+0.2
|
Biden
+6
|
D
Lean
|
Arizona
|
11
|
Trump
+4
|
Biden
+5
|
D
Lean
|
Nevada
|
6
|
Clinton
+2
|
Biden
+4
|
D
Lean
|
Pennsylvania
|
20
|
Trump
+1
|
Biden
+4
|
D
Lean
|
Nebraska 2nd District
|
1
|
Trump
+2
|
Biden
+7
|
D
TU
|
Florida
|
29
|
Trump
+1
|
Biden
+1
|
D
TU
|
North Carolina
|
15
|
Trump
+4
|
Biden
+1
|
D
TU
|
Maine 2nd District
|
1
|
Trump
+10
|
Tie
|
R
TU
|
Texas
|
38
|
Trump
+9
|
Trump
+2
|
R
TU
|
Ohio
|
18
|
Trump
+11
|
Trump
+2
|
R
TU
|
Georgia
|
16
|
Trump
+5
|
Trump
+2
|
R
TU
|
Iowa
|
6
|
Trump
+9
|
Trump
+2
|
R
TU
|
Solid GOP (22 states or districts,
125 electoral votes): Alabama, Alaska,
Arkansas, Idaho, Indiana, Kansas, Kentucky, Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri,
Montana, Nebraska, Nebraska 1st and 3rd Districts, North Dakota, Oklahoma,
South Carolina, South Dakota, Tennessee, Utah, West Virginia, Wyoming
|
But again, note well, there is much to overcome – voter suppression,
Russian interference, Trump lies, third party influence, slow mail-in balloting
and more. Heed our warning well:
WARNING: No matter how good the numbers look
at any given time, the Democrats will not win any election unless they work
hard to earn it – registering voters, calling, texting, donating – throughout
the summer and fall, up to and including Election Day.
Here's a nice chant you can practice in the comfort of your home --- it worked for Ali vs Foreman, so I think it could apply here: "Joe, Joe, boma ye! Joe, Joe, boma ye!"
ReplyDelete