The Western Journal

Flood of Final Polls Released – If History Holds True, They’re Almost All Good News for Trump

The provided⁢ text discusses the results ⁢of ‍polling as the election approaches,⁣ indicating a competitive race between Donald Trump⁢ and Kamala Harris. As‌ of the latest Real Clear Polling average,⁣ Trump is reported to be tied with ‌Harris nationally at 48.5% ‍each. In battleground states, Trump ​appears to hold ​a slight edge in several, including‍ Arizona,‍ Nevada, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, and⁤ Georgia, ​although he is ‍trailing in Wisconsin and Michigan.

The narrative emphasizes that past polling often underestimated Trump’s support in⁣ previous elections. Specific instances from the 2016 and 2020 elections are cited, illustrating discrepancies between predicted outcomes and actual results. As polling shows Trump leading in multiple battleground states, his campaign remains cautiously optimistic, especially with strong early voting participation from Republicans.

Additionally, a New York Times/Siena College poll ⁢painted⁢ a ⁤different picture, showing Harris⁤ leading‌ in several key states, raising questions about potential biases in polling methodologies. ‌Republican representatives argue that polls currently underestimate Trump’s support compared⁢ to​ prior election ⁤cycles.

the text suggests a favorable ⁤position for Trump ‌heading into ⁢election day, asserting​ that historical trends⁤ may⁤ influence the outcomes once again.


If the past is any guide, the polling coming in during the closing days before Tuesday’s election looks very good for Republican Donald Trump.

As of Monday, the Real Clear Polling average of polls nationally has Trump tied with Democrat Kamala Harris at 48.5 percent.

But he is up 0.7 percent in the seven swing state surveys overall in the RCP average, 48.5 to 47.8 percent.

Breaking down the numbers, that translates to Trump ahead in Arizona, Nevada, Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Georgia, but trailing by 0.4 percent in Wisconsin and 1.2 percent in Michigan.

If the race went exactly as this polling shows, Trump would defeat Harris 287 to 251, according to the RCP interactive map.

But keep in mind, the polling conducted in both 2016 and 2020 significantly underestimated Trump’s support.

In 2016, the RCP average nationally gave Democrat Hillary Clinton a 3.2 percent advantage, but she only won by 2.1 percent in the popular vote.

In Michigan, RCP showed Clinton with a 3.4 percent lead, but Trump ended up carrying the state by 0.3 percent.

And Clinton led 6.5 percent in Wisconsin but lost the state by 0.7 percent to Trump.

Switching to 2020, Democrat Joe Biden was ahead of Trump 7.2 percent nationally and won by 4.5 percent.

In Wisconsin, Biden’s lead was 6.7 percent, but he only carried the state by less than one percent.

In Michigan, Biden was ahead by 5.1 percent, but only won by 2.8 percent.

So if the past polling patterns hold, Trump looks to be in a very good place to get a swing state sweep, given Harris’ narrow 0.4 percent lead in Wisconsin and 1.4 percent advantage in Michigan.

The Decision HQ/The Hill average of polls published on Sunday finds Trump ahead in all seven battleground states.

However, a New York Times/Sienna College published Sunday showed Harris ahead in Nevada (49 to 46 percent), North Carolina (48 to 46), Wisconsin (49 to 47), Georgia (48 to 47), as well as tied in Pennsylvania and Michigan, while Trump only led Arizona with a 49 to 45 margin.

The Times added this caveat: “Across these final polls, white Democrats were 16 percent likelier to respond than white Republicans. That’s a larger disparity than our earlier polls this year, and it’s not much better than our final polls in 2020 — even with the pandemic over. It raises the possibility that the polls could underestimate Mr. Trump yet again.”

Republican National Committee political director James Blair responded to the Times survey on Sunday on Fox News saying, “In all of the battleground states,…they’ve set the electorate to the left of 2020, which doesn’t comport with what we know, which is that all of these electorates have moved to the right” based on the number who have registered Republican.

“They are putting some cover out there because they are going to under represent President Trump’s support,” he added.

On Monday, Trump campaign spokesperson Karoline Leavitt said, “Our internal polls have President Trump leading in every key battleground state. We are cautiously optimistic about a big victory tomorrow night as long as everyone turns out to vote.”

She pointed to strong early voting numbers for Republicans, arguing that puts Trump in a very good position going into Election Day.

So overall, good news for Trump one day ahead of the big day.




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