Good News for Trump: New York Times Swing State Poll Shows Major Shift
The excerpt discusses a recent poll conducted by The New York Times and Siena College, revealing that former President Donald Trump has gained traction in swing states like Arizona, Georgia, and North Carolina following a presidential debate with Vice President Kamala Harris. The poll indicates a shift, with Trump moving from trailing Harris to leading her by five points in Arizona and two points in North Carolina, while his lead in Georgia remains steady at four points.
The analysis notes that past polling data from 2020 should be approached with caution, pointing out inaccuracies in how establishment pollsters had forecasted the election outcomes. It highlights the contrasting performances of various pollsters, showcasing that some had Trump winning the popular vote, while others predicted a win for Harris.
Furthermore, other state polls show Harris leading by only narrow margins in traditionally blue states, indicating a potential shift in voter sentiment. Analysts suggest that if Virginia, which Biden won handily in 2020, is now competitive, it could signify a larger trend favoring Trump. the commentary stresses skepticism towards current polling and suggests that the dynamics of the upcoming election may favor Trump more than the polls indicate.
Recent history suggests that when we receive state-level polling from establishment pollsters, we should take the results with a gargantuan grain of salt. And that makes these new numbers all the more encouraging.
On Monday, The New York Times announced the results of a poll conducted Sept. 17-21 in the anticipated swing states of Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina.
In short, the Times/Siena College poll showed that former President Donald Trump has gained momentum across the Sun Belt since his Sept. 10 presidential debate against Vice President Kamala Harris and ABC News.
For instance, prior to the debate the same pollster had Harris leading by five points in Arizona. According to the new poll, however, Trump has now surged to a five-point lead in the Grand Canyon State.
Likewise, a pre-debate poll gave Harris a two-point lead in North Carolina. But Trump now leads the Tar Heel State by two points.
Meanwhile, the former president’s four-point lead in Georgia remains unchanged.
This seems like a good time to remind readers of how pollsters performed in the controversial 2020 presidential election.
Establishment pollster Nate Silver of ABC’s FiveThirtyEight compiled a chart of 2020’s most accurate pollsters ranked by average error.
Last week on the social media platform X, pollster Mark Rasmussen of Rasmussen Reports retweeted that chart complete with results from each pollster’s latest national poll, where available.
As you can see in the chart below, the latest available national poll from 2020’s most accurate pollsters — in this case AtlasIntel, Trafalgar Group and Rasmussen Reports — had Trump winning the national popular vote by a margin of two-to-five points.
Meanwhile, 2020’s least-accurate pollsters had Harris winning by comparable margins.
What could possibly explain this??@Peoples_Pundit https://t.co/Zsegwyy1Wl
— Mark Mitchell, Rasmussen Reports (@Mark_R_Mitchell) September 19, 2024
Likewise, in 2020 those inaccurate pollsters missed by huge margins — especially in swing states. In fact, given the size of the apparent errors, one wonders if they did so on purpose.
For instance, the final 2020 RealClearPolling average showed Trump leading now-President Joe Biden by only one point in Ohio. Trump won that state by 7.2 points.
How could all pollsters combined miss the mark by that much?
Something similar occurred in Iowa, Wisconsin, Florida and even Texas.
In short, when all errors tend in one direction, as they did in 2020, the mistakes appear deliberate.
Having seen how establishment pollsters either botched or manipulated their 2020 results, now consider current state polling outside the anticipated swing states.
Last week, the University of Mary Washington in Fredericksburg, Virginia, released a poll showing Harris with only a one-point lead in the Old Dominion. Biden won the state by 10 points in 2020.
“If Virginia is close, this election is going to be a landslide for Trump,” political analyst David Chapman posted on Sunday.
If Virginia is close, this election is going to be a landslide for Trump.
— David D. Chapman (@davidchapman141) September 22, 2024
Meanwhile, a Siena poll conducted after the debate showed Harris with only a 12-point lead in deep-blue New York state. In 2020, Biden won New York by 23 points.
NEW YORK IS IN PLAY, new poll finds.
2024 Election in New York
🟦Harris 52% (+12)
🟥Trump 40%A state Biden won by 23%, New York is becoming increasingly competitive. Harris will likely pull off the worst Democratic performance in the Empire State since 1988.
Siena College |… pic.twitter.com/H19YP5zM1h
— Election Time (@ElectionTime_) September 22, 2024
You read that correctly. Current state polls show Harris running nine-to-eleven points behind Biden in Virginia and New York.
Couple that with the fact that 2020’s most accurate pollsters show Trump leading nationwide, and only one possible conclusion remains.
In short, one simply cannot envision a scenario in which Trump wins the national popular vote, support for Harris drops by double digits in blue states, and yet swing states simultaneously reproduce what officials certified as razor-thin victories in places like Wisconsin and Arizona, where Biden prevailed in 2020 by approximately 20,000 and 10,000 votes, respectively.
Likewise, in 2020 Trump prevailed in North Carolina by slightly more than one percentage point. Is it even possible that he now leads there by only two points when neighboring Virginia has shifted hard right?
Even the Times/Siena establishment pollsters know that Trump holds a commanding lead in the Sun Belt. In fact, they have almost certainly underestimated that lead.
Advertise with The Western Journal and reach millions of highly engaged readers, while supporting our work. Advertise Today.
" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
Now loading...