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Monday, March 18, 2024
March 18, 2024

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Dems, don’t panic about polls – yet

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Democrats hoped this presidential election would be a cakewalk. In their eyes, the presumptive Republican nominee, Donald Trump, spent most of the spring alienating big chunks of the electorate, beginning with women. Meanwhile, the presumptive Democratic candidate, Hillary Clinton, has run a careful, well-funded, well-honed campaign. What could go wrong?

And yet, in a spate of reputable surveys, Trump has suddenly erased the advantage Clinton had held all year. The average of major polls compiled by the website RealClearPolitics shows the two candidates tied with 43 percent each. In at least three polls, Trump has even pulled ahead by a slim margin. That’s been enough to send some Democrats into a swivet. But they shouldn’t panic.

First of all, polls in May don’t have much predictive value about an election that’s more than five months away.

Four years ago, in May 2012, Mitt Romney was tied with President Barack Obama in the RealClearPolitics average, just as Trump and Clinton are tied today. In November, Romney lost by four percentage points.

In May 2008, John McCain was only a little behind Obama, according to the same index. In November, McCain lost by seven percentage points.

There’s one big reason Trump is doing better than expected in the polls: Republican voters have rallied behind him faster than some analysts expected.

Many GOP leaders, beginning with Romney, House Speaker Paul Ryan, and presidential runner-up Ted Cruz, have refused to endorse the apparent nominee, but that hasn’t stopped rank-and-file conservatives from closing ranks. In an NBC News-Wall Street Journal poll released this week, Trump’s support among Republicans in a head-to-head contest with Clinton jumped to 86 percent, up from 72 percent a month earlier.

Democrats, by contrast, are still divided between Clinton and Bernie Sanders. In the same poll, only about two-thirds of Sanders voters were willing to say they would vote for Clinton in November if she wins the nomination. Her support among Democrats has actually declined slightly, from 87 percent a month ago to 84 percent now, and so has her backing among independents.

Boost from Obama

That depresses Clinton’s overall number and makes her look weak, but it’s probably only a temporary weakness.

“Sanders people say they won’t vote for her now, but they’ll get over it,” predicts William Schneider, a pollster and political scientist at Virginia’s George Mason University who has been analyzing presidential campaigns since 1976.

One more factor that should help Clinton: Obama has regained some of his lost popularity. In recent polls, the president’s job approval has reached 51 percent, its highest level since his second inauguration in 2013. That means Obama would be an asset to the Democratic nominee in the fall.

All that said, Clinton still faces serious challenges.

After six years of political gridlock, many voters are yearning for change in Washington, and that should help Trump. “She has become the candidate of the status quo, and that’s not a happy place to be,” Schneider said of Clinton.

Clinton also has a problem with independent and moderate voters (two different but not always distinct categories). Several polls have shown her losing to Trump among independents. Among moderates, who ought to be a natural constituency for her, the NBC-Journal poll found her running roughly even with the Republican.

“She has to find a way to appeal to Sanders supporters and also build a majority coalition,” said David Winston, a former adviseor to Newt Gingrich. “That’s not an easy task.”


Doyle McManus is a columnist for the Los Angeles Times. Email: doyle.mcmanus@latimes.com

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