Los Angeles Times

Trump is angry at sinking poll numbers

The president fumes about a series of recent surveys that show Biden building a comfortabl­e lead.

- By Melanie Mason and Mark Z. Barabak

Polling has long been a favorite topic of President Trump’s hyperactiv­e Twitter feed, but lately he has been more angry than boastful.

“They are called SUPPRESSIO­N POLLS, and are put out to dampen enthusiasm,” Trump recently wrote of surveys by CNN and other news outlets that show him significan­tly trailing rival Joe Biden. “Despite 3½ years of phony Witch Hunts, we are winning, and will close it out on November 3rd!”

His bellicose tone comes as polls show the presumptiv­e Democratic nominee opening up an 8-point advantage nationally against Trump and, more important, notching smaller but consistent polling leads in key swing states such as Michigan, Florida and Wisconsin.

“Given the size of his margin and the consensus across polls, I think there’s pretty strong evidence that Biden holds a clear lead,” said Charles Franklin, director of the Marquette Law School Poll in Milwaukee. “While it’s possible the polls are wrong, they would have to all be wrong” to overstate Biden’s support.

Democrats are hardly crowing — at least openly. They remember all too well their confidence in 2016 that Hillary Clinton would win, a view reinforced by national polls (which were largely accurate) and some key state polls (which were not).

“Ignore the polls. We can’t take anything for granted this November — the stakes are simply too high,” Biden tweeted Wednesday, along with a link to register to vote.

The missteps from four years ago have fed into a sense that Trump’s true standing can defy convention­al survey methods. At this time in 2016, polling showed Clinton besting Trump, albeit at a slightly narrower margin than the current Biden-Trump matchup. Clinton largely maintained her advantage in national polls through election day, and national surveys came within 1 percentage point of her margin in the popular vote.

But the presidency is decided by the electoral college, and state polls failed to capture Trump’s narrow victories in the previously Democratic stronghold­s of Michigan, Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin, which sent him to the Oval Office.

In their postmortem­s, pollsters identified one key problem with state-level polling: the failure to account for the education levels of respondent­s.

“What we saw in 2016 was that, depending on the education, you voted for very different candidates, particular­ly among white respondent­s,” said Josh Clinton (no relation to the former presidenti­al candidate), who teaches political science at Vanderbilt University and co-directs the school’s Vanderbilt Poll.

Trump performed especially well with white voters without college degrees, while his rival proved more popular with those with higher education levels. By failing to account for those difference­s, pollsters understate­d Trump’s support.

Now, Clinton said, state pollsters are more diligent in accounting for education levels, a move he believed would make those surveys more accurate.

There’s little for Trump to cheer in the latest set of opinion surveys. Not only does he lag Biden in head-tohead matchups, but a growing majority disapprove of his job performanc­e. He gets low marks on his temperamen­t and trustworth­iness, and more people prefer Biden in terms of ability to handle the COVID-19 pandemic and race relations, issues that have surged to the top of the campaign agenda.

Moreover, the president’s numbers are slumping among women and independen­ts, two groups that cost Republican­s control of the House in the 2018 midterm election. Older voters, who backed Trump in 2016, now say they prefer Biden. One recent poll by the Public Religion Research Institute found that 62% of white evangelica­l voters hold favorable views of Trump, a decline of 15 percentage points among that bedrock constituen­cy.

Trump does maintain a modest advantage as to whom voters trust to best handle the economy, an important indicator for an incumbent who has staked much of his reelection pitch on the robust stock market performanc­e and low unemployme­nt the country enjoyed during most of his term. But even there, the pandemic and economic shutdown it necessitat­ed have cut into Trump’s approval rating.

The president appeared especially bothered by a CNN poll released Monday showing Biden with a sizable 14-point lead, based on responses from roughly 1,100 registered voters. Trump’s campaign demanded the network retract the poll and apologize; CNN declined the extraordin­ary request. Trump tweeted a memo from a GOP pollster accusing CNN and other outlets of deliberate­ly underrepre­senting how many Republican­s would likely vote in November, thus downplayin­g the president’s chances.

“The refusal to screen for actual likely voters is creating an under-polling of Republican­s and therefore Trump voters,” the pollster, John McLaughlin, wrote. “It seems intentiona­l. It’s exactly what the media did in 2016. Let’s prove them wrong again.”

The argument harks back to 2012, when Republican­s rallied around an obscure website that claimed to “unskew” polling that showed GOP nominee Mitt Romney trailing President Obama. The mathematic­al contortion­s proved unfounded when Obama handily beat Romney, as polls had indicated.

“All those people who were making these John McLaughlin-like arguments in 2012 were completely wrong,” said Matt Barreto, a UCLA political scientist and Democratic pollster. “They had these harebraine­d ideas, and that’s exactly what this is.”

Despite the good polling news for Biden, there remain warning signs for the former vice president. Surveys suggest less-than-fervent enthusiasm for Biden among Black voters, the backbone of the Democratic base.

“If the election were to happen today, it would not look good for Biden” with that crucial group, said Ray Block Jr., a professor of political science and African American studies at Penn State University.

The risk for Biden is not that significan­t numbers of Black voters will flip to Trump but that they may not vote at all. The recent protests against racial injustice in response to George Floyd’s killing by Minneapoli­s police prove that the Black community is clearly motivated for political action, Block said.

But, he cautioned, “it will be up to the Biden camp to move with, not against, this momentum if he seeks the support of Black voters.”

 ?? Alex Brandon Associated Press ?? PRESIDENT TRUMP is trailing now, but Joe Biden urges Democrats not to “take anything for granted.”
Alex Brandon Associated Press PRESIDENT TRUMP is trailing now, but Joe Biden urges Democrats not to “take anything for granted.”

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