Decision 2024: JMC’s “Election Soundbites” (October 19 edition)
Introduction
Early voting is underway in Louisiana (and concludes on Tuesday, 10/29), and the end is in sight. Currently, 21 states are undergoing in person voting, and Election Day just over two weeks away.
Given that we’re going into the final stretch of the campaign, what has been going on (from a polling perspective) with the Presidential race?
Presidential Polling
When discussing polling for the 2024 Presidential contest, the main challenge for the party in power/Democratic nominee Kamala Harris is that the Biden Administration remains unpopular (42-56% approval/disapproval according to a 7-day average of polls taken, which is almost identical to 42-57% last week). Since Kamala Harris is Joe Biden’s Vice-President, that obvious association with an unpopular President remains a negative weight on her campaign.
What has been characteristic of the entire election cycle is that supposed “big events” generally haven’t moved the needle much. Even Special Counsel Jack Smith recent filing of a 165 page brief on Presidential immunity regarding former President Trump’s conduct on January 6 ironically may ironically have HELPED the Trump campaign: since his release of the brief, a Harris lead of 2.4% has steadily dropped to 1.8% a week ago, and is now at 1.6% – to put this lead in proper perspective, RealClearPolitics notes that at this point in time, Biden in 2020 was ahead of Trump by 8.9%, while Hillary Clinton was up 6.5% over Trump in 2016.
Still, the general tempo of the campaign for the last 8 weeks has been an “equilibrium” of a national popular vote lead of about 2% for Kamala Harris (which, incidentally, was the popular vote spread for the 2016 Presidential election that initially elected Donald Trump).
Below is a representation of the weekly changes in the national poll averages since the Trump/Biden debate:
National popular vote vs the Electoral College
When discussing the news value of “national popular vote polls”, it’s the Electoral College (and not the national popular vote) that actually elects a President, and that marginally benefits Republicans due to an inefficient vote distribution of Democratic and Republican votes across each state. In other words, a Republican can be elected President without attaining a popular vote majority (or even a plurality), because California and New York have in recent election cycles generated larger Democratic vote margins than Florida and Texas have for Republicans. And while large margins in California/New York “run up the (national popular vote) score”, “running up the score” doesn’t get a Democratic candidate any closer to the needed 270 electoral votes – winning critical swing states DOES.
To illustrate the disconnect between the Electoral College and the national popular vote, Joe Biden was elected in 2020 with a 4.5% popular vote margin (51.3-46.8%) over Donald Trump, but his victory was (using applicable 2024 numbers) a 303-235 Electoral College win (270 electoral votes are needed to win), Biden’s Electoral College victory was due to narrow victories in several states, like Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin.
Using that 4.5% national popular vote win as a baseline, we can assess the extent to which shifts in the national popular vote towards Trump could flip specific swing states, as national shifts have an impact in both swing and non-swing states. To be conservative in his analysis, JMC is assuming that only half of a national popular vote shift (percentage-wise) occurs in a swing state, since those states (which get an oversized amount of attention from either side) are less elastic in their movement towards a candidate.
Even with this conservative analysis, any movement towards Trump relative to a 4.5% national popular vote deficit would “flip” states to Trump that narrowly voted for Biden in 2020. For instance, Trump instantly flips Arizona and Georgia even if Kamala Harris wins the national popular vote by 3.5% (a shift of only 1% towards Trump, in other words), and those two flips alone get Trump up to 262 electoral votes – 8 electoral votes shy of a victory. A Harris win of 2.5% (a 2% shift towards Trump relative to 2020) would also flip Wisconsin and get Trump to the necessary 270 electoral votes.
Let’s apply that concept to current polling numbers – a current Harris lead of 1.6% translates to 291 electoral votes for Trump. In other words, a 1.6% Harris lead equals a 2.9% swing to Trump relative to his 2020 popular vote loss. A swing of that magnitude (even accounting for swing states’ inelasticity relative to the rest of the country) flips Arizona, Georgia, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin and gives Trump the electoral votes he needs to win. Below is a representation of the electoral college impact of various national popular vote possibilities.
There is another aspect to polling that needs to be considered: the fact that previous election cycles (specifically, 2016 and 2020) had polling errors that materially understated Donald Trump’s support, particularly in the swing states that mattered. If we were to quantify the amount that the average of last week polls were “off”, and factor that error into the average of current polling over the last 7 days, what we find is that Trump can (based on current polling) flip Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin. Assuming that polling accuracy has not improved since 2016/2020, those flips would get him (under this hypothetical example) 306 electoral votes (this is unchanged since last week).
The early vote
While technically Election Day is November 5, an increasing number of voters are choosing to vote before that. Research done shows that 45% voted early in 2016, and that number surged to 69% in 2020. While the pandemic/mass adoption of mail voting certainly contributed to the increase in early voting in 2020, the reality is, Election Day voting is nevertheless becoming a thing of the past for an increasing number of people, which DOES impact the timing of when campaigns need to disseminate their messaging to voters.
This past week, early voting accelerated even more, with mail ballots going out in the 100% vote by mail states. In person early voting commenced in Georgia, Iowa, Kansas, Louisiana, North Carolina, Rhode Island, and Tennessee.
Below is a calendar of the next 14 days of early voting – things are about to move fast as we go into the home stretch:
Early Voting Data
Currently, we have data on mail ballot requests in 46 states, and 62.6 million (up from 58.5M a week ago) have already requested a mail in ballot. Furthermore, 13,260,650 in 45 states have already voted either by mail or in person (compared to 3,791,983 a week ago). These figures will further skyrocket next week, as in person early voting starts in Alaska, Arkansas, Connecticut, Delaware, Florida, Hawaii, Idaho, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Missouri, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, South Carolina, Utah, Texas, West Virginia, and Wisconsin. That just leaves Oklahoma and Kentucky as the final in person early voting states.
Conclusion
Even though Republicans have remained about two points behind in the national popular vote since the Biden withdrawal, polling numbers have slightly moved towards Trump in the last two weeks, keeping the Harris lead small enough to make it possible for Donald Trump to amass 270 electoral votes. Not to mention that polling numbers don’t factor in the possibility for “misses” which both in 2016 and 2020 understated the Trump vote.
Meanwhile, with early voting accelerating, we’ve reached the peak of campaign season (in terms of reaching the maximum number of movable voters).