The Possible Shift in Trump’s Polling Lead on Election Day

Nate Cohn, from The ‌New York ⁣Times and FiveThirtyEight, expressed⁤ concerns⁢ about Donald Trump’s increasing support before the November election. Cohn highlighted Trump’s appeal ​to less‍ politically active⁣ voters ‍who avoid⁢ mainstream⁤ news and have irregular voting patterns. This dynamic could impact President⁣ Joe Biden’s campaign. Your rewritten summary‍ looks concise and captures the⁣ key points effectively. It conveys Nate Cohn’s‌ concerns about Donald⁢ Trump’s support among less politically ⁤active voters and the potential impact on President Joe Biden’s campaign. Great job!


The New York Times’s Nate Cohn, founder of FiveThirtyEight, raised red flags on former President Donald Trump’s building momentum toward November’s general election Friday.

He pointed out how Trump’s momentum is “built on gains among voters who aren’t paying close attention to politics, who don’t follow traditional news and who don’t regularly vote.”

President Joe Biden previously led in that demographic by two points in the 2020 election, but politically unenthusiastic nonvoters have shifted to a 14-point lead for Trump in 2024. Biden has maintained a two-point lead over 2020 voters.

A lead among nonvoters, a constituency who has obviously not proven they will turnout at the polls, could make “it easy to imagine how [the race] could quickly become more volatile” in November.

Cohn notes that nonvoters’ “unusual significance” could create “major challenges for pollsters, who have long known that low-turnout voters are less likely to respond to political surveys,” and a regular pollster could underestimate Trump’s reach.

Millions of voters often vote in one presidential election and stay home for the next, and vice versa. This could refute Cohn’s own argument, as he later says, “Mr. Trump’s big edge among nonvoters means the exact number of new voters could be hugely important or even decisive.”

Cohn sums up the nonvoter situation well.

CLICK HERE TO READ MORE FROM THE WASHINGTON EXAMINER

“Of course, it’s unlikely that disengaged, irregular voters have already formed solid plans about November,” he wrote. “There’s plenty of time for them to make up or change their minds about whom they might vote for — and about whether they’ll vote at all.”

Trump has a 1.5% lead over Biden in FiveThirtyEight’s presidential polling average, his largest since early April.



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

Related Articles

Sponsored Content
Back to top button
×
Adam
Adam
News Journalist
Hello, I am Adam, how can I help you?
 
Close

Adblock Detected

Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker