The Western Journal

Election Guru Drops Brutal Election Bomb on Kamala Harris as ‘Mediocre’ Trend Hits Her Hard

The article discusses Nate Silver’s latest election forecast for ‌the 2024 presidential race, focusing on Vice President Kamala Harris’ declining odds‍ against Donald ⁤Trump. According to Silver’s ‌model, Trump ‍currently‍ has a 58.2% chance ‌of winning, ⁣while Harris sits at 41.6%, reflecting a ‌drop in Harris’ fortunes over the week. The article highlights that ‍while Harris shows strength in national polls, her performance in critical battleground ‌states like Pennsylvania and Michigan is⁢ lacking, raising⁢ concerns⁤ for her campaign. Silver points⁣ out that Harris’s support in these states has diminished ⁤significantly, impacting her overall⁤ chances.

Despite some ⁤decent national⁤ polling for⁣ Harris, the model‍ suggests a lean towards Trump ​winning the Electoral College. The article alludes to the possibility of a split between the popular vote and Electoral College results,⁤ which could be exacerbated by the ⁣dynamics in heavily ‍Democratic states like California​ and New York. while Harris remains ⁣a contender,​ Silver’s analysis reveals vulnerabilities in her campaign that could hinder her bid ‍for the presidency, especially ‌as crucial debates and the final campaign stretch‌ approach.


Momentum and hype can only take you so many places. If polling guru Nate Silver’s latest forecast is correct, one of them isn’t the White House.

According to the founder of wonk outlet FiveThirtyEight, who now publishes his model on Substack, his latest prediction has Kamala Harris’ odds of taking the presidency down over five points over the past week.

While the race is still a toss-up according to Silver’s model — anything that falls within a 60-40 percentage split qualifies as such, in his rubric — Trump’s 58.2 percent odds on Wednesday, vs. Harris’ 41.6 percent odds, falls within the outer limits of the toss-up range.

That’s down from a 52.4 percent Trump, 47.3 percent Harris model last week.

The culprit, he said, was that Harris’ modest strength in national polls wasn’t matched by her performance in battleground states, and the momentum and hype out of the Democratic National Convention hadn’t produced as much of a bounce as hoped.

“There’s room to debate the convention bounce stuff, but Harris has been getting a lot of mediocre state polls lately,” Silver wrote, according to Fox News.

Writing on social media, Silver said that there were issues in two of the biggest states Harris needs to carry in order to beat Donald Trump — Pennsylvania and Michigan.

“National polls and polls of other swing states mostly decent for Harris, but erosion in PA/MI hurts a lot in the model,” he wrote Wednesday.

“In MI, the polling average has fallen from Harris +3.1 pre-DNC to Harris +1.9 now.”

Late Thursday, many on social media noted that the model had shifted to a lean-Trump election:

Silver said that while he thought the day itself was decent for Harris, “she was hurt by this series of polls from a Democratic group that showed her exactly tied with Trump in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.

“Our polling averages apply a relatively harsh ‘house effects’ adjustment to partisan-sponsored polls, so it interprets ties in partisan polls as losing. And PA/MI/WI polls are really important to the forecast.

“But we’re now finally starting to get some post-Labor Day polls, which look decent for Harris, and those will be subject to less of a convention bounce adjustment than polls that went into the field immediately after the DNC. So we’ll see what the several days bring.”

“National polls look decent-to-good for Harris, but the probability of an Electoral College/popular vote split is up to almost 20%,” he added.

In fact, because of the fact that the two largest states in the country are blue — California and New York — and also get voters out to the polls for other races and ballot issues, a popular/electoral vote split, particularly with Donald Trump as the nominee, is highly likely in any GOP win.

Kamala’s relative weakness in national polling aggregates compared to both Hillary Clinton and Joe Biden at similar junctures in the 2016 and 2020 races, respectively, has been a warning sign to anyone who thought that “vibes” and “joy” were continuing unabated in camp Kamala.

Yes, she has a better chance of winning than Joe Biden did. So would most banana slugs, were they eligible for ballot access.

Her ascent has stalled, and a softball interview with CNN that still didn’t go so hot hasn’t helped, either. That leaves the debates and the homestretch of campaigning — two areas where Kamala can’t just hide behind choreographed rallies.

If you wanted to win and had to be in one candidate’s shoes, both subjectively and objectively, it would have to be Trump’s at this point.






" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Related Articles

Sponsored Content
Back to top button
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker