That Story About Mexico Denying a Deportation Flight Might Be Fake News
Gavin Newsom Doesn't Want You to Know About This Disastrous Emergency Services Decision
Here's the Line That Shows Trump's Firing of Inspectors General Was a Great...
What McConnell Did After the Hegseth Vote Is Infuriating
Mass Deportation Raids Have Begun in Los Angeles
Never Forget Who Democrats Are, Hold Them to Their Own Standards
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 252: What the New Testament Says About Leadership
Efficiency Is Not Limited Government
The Biden Administration Left a Medicare Mess Behind — Now Trump Must Clean...
Last Minute Pardons Break Political Retribution Cycle
Trump Clashes With Democrat in Fiery Debate Over LA Wildfires
Mexico Blocks U.S. Military Deportation Flight, Prevents Landing
Taliban Rejects Trump’s Demand to Return $7 Billion in U.S. Military Gear
Trump Cleans House, Fires 17 Inspectors General Overnight
Republican Lawmaker: 'Four Years of Trump Aren’t Enough'
Tipsheet

Two New 2024 Battleground State Polls Both Point in the Same Direction

AP Photo/Patrick Semansky

This election cycle is shaping up to be a strange one, with a striking dichotomy hanging over it. On one hand, Republicans have lost or under-performed in every national election since 2016. Just this week, Democrats comfortably won back a swing suburban district in Long Island, New York -- which Biden had carried in 2020, but Republicans swung by double digits and won two years later. As we've seen in recent years, high-propensity voters have gravitated toward Team Blue, resulting in a distinct Democratic advantage in lower turnout off-year and special election contests. Democrats are also taking full advantage of early and mail-in balloting, building huge and often insurmountable leads prior to election day (while Republicans remain highly skeptical of these successful vote-banking practices, partially thanks to Donald Trump's influence).  They're also consistently outspending the GOP. This was also the case in a local battle over a state legislative seat outside of Philadelphia, with Pennsylvania's lower house majority at stake. Democrats massively over-performed, winning the seat in a total blowout. 

Advertisement

These are not the sorts of breadcrumbs that augur well for a strong November for Republicans who are still smarting from a distinctly and historically underwhelming midterm cycle, in which an expected 'red wave' never materialized.  Neither is the drumbeat of House retirements. On the other hand, not only is Joe Biden in very serious trouble on overall approval, individual issues, and perceptions of his fitness for the job -- all of which were factors in 2022 that didn't seem to hurt the Democrats very much -- he also continues to trail Donald Trump head-to-head.  The 45th president narrowly leads his successor in the national polling average, and he continues to post advantages in a string of key states.  A few new additions to the list:


Trump by two, with a growing lead when other candidates are included. No wonder Bidenworld is concerned enough to be actively wooing open terrorist sympathizers in Michigan.  The Biden campaign has also been looking to flip North Carolina.  How's that looking so far? 

Advertisement


Add these data sets to Fox's recent numbers out of Georgia (Trump +8) and Wisconsin (exact tie), and Trump looks pretty well-positioned at the moment. (Nikki Haley's camp would point out that she's positioned far better, according to a raft of polling, but she does not appear to have a path to the nomination). How well positioned? Here's the founder of Real Clear Politics running the current electoral math:


Playing around with the '270 to win' widget, 293 looks like Trump's hypothetical high-water mark.  There are also plausible scenarios with Trump winning in the 270's range, as well as a conceivable 269-269 electoral college tie, depending on how a few swing districts in Maine and Nebraska might go.  There are also plenty of paths for another Biden win, obviously, as Trump would need to win over a number of states he lost four years ago.  Of course, if Republicans again under-perform, all the polling won't matter.  Relying on lower-propensity voters to show up in force, counter-acting Team Blue's high-propensity Trump era coalition, is risky business:

Advertisement

Republicans are looking at the results in PA, OK, and NY and are saying what's going on. Why are we performing so badly? We lost high propensity (mostly college educated white voters). We gained lots of low propensity voters who don't show up. And the weirdness around conservative culture (T-Swift is a CIA plant, election was stolen, arrest women for having abortions) is only making these people run away more. It's hurting up and down the ballot almost everywhere we go. And the fact that low propensity voters won't vote early because they believe in nonsensical conspiracies about voting machines means we can't make up for it with election day turnout. It's happening everywhere and could happen in November. People need to be aware.

Yeah, the 'bad, old, loser pre-Trump' Republican Party was pretty good at winning a lot of elections, even if they lost consecutive presidential elections to a talented Barack Obama:

Advertisement


Food for thought. Democrats, meanwhile, will be white-knuckling Biden's public appearances and utterances, concerned that a major lapse or stumble could be devastating. Suboptimal. Biden is very, very vulnerable. They all know it. Jon Stewart is warning them. But they don't feel like they have other viable options, so the anxiety-wracked march forward continues. On the other side, Republicans still have to worry about this (setting aside the trolling, this graphic is useful about what might be coming down the pike, though it's unclear how many of the criminal trials will get going before the election, if any:


Buckle up.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement