The Denver Post

Candidates widely disliked again; Biden could benefit

- By Giovanni Russonello

It’s a truism of politics: When you’ve got an incumbent on the ballot, the race will be a referendum on her or his leadership — probably more than it’ll be about what the challenger is offering. So with President Donald Trump’s approval rating stuck deep in the red, there’s little doubt that he is facing an uphill battle.

But there’s a wrinkle to this situation: His likely Democratic opponent, Joe Biden, also has a favorabili­ty problem.

Polling suggests this November’s election could become only the second presidenti­al contest in the history of modern polling in which both candidates are seen negatively by most voters. The other was just four years ago, when preelectio­n surveys and exit polls found that Trump and his Democratic rival, Hillary Clinton, were disliked by a majority of voters.

The fact that so many Americans in the last election and this one have expressed an aversion to each of the major candidates speaks to the heavy polarizati­on that now defines the national electorate — not to mention the wholesale disillusio­nment many voters feel with the political system.

As a result, there are large slices of voters whose support is basically predictabl­e. “Elections are becoming more and more about pretty stark partisan divides between Democrats and Republican­s,” Guy Cecil, a Democratic strategist who leads the Priorities USA Action super PAC, said in an interview.

But there are specific contours to the negative views this time around that offer insights into the weaknesses that Trump and Biden will need to address as their campaigns enter the summer months.

One key difference between this year and 2016 jumps out: In that election, people who saw both candidates unfavorabl­y broke in favor of Trump, seeing him as the better of two bad options. This year, Biden holds an advantage — by a mile — among these ambivalent voters.

In a Monmouth University poll released last week, roughly one-fifth of voters did not express a positive view of either candidate (Trump’s net favorabili­ty rating was -19 in that poll; Biden’s was -7). Those voters broke hard for Biden, 59% to 18%.

In the days leading up to the 2016 election, a Monmouth survey found a greater share of voters (34%) saying they did not like either Clinton or Trump. In that poll, Clinton had a slimmer edge over Trump among those voters. After the election, exit polls and other postmortem polling found that they had swung hard in Trump’s favor, with many changing their minds at the last minute.

Thanks in large part to those voters, he squeaked by with an Electoral College victory, even though more people actually said they disliked him (60%) than said they disliked Clinton (55%), according to exit polls.

The picture this year is different. Americans’ views of the president have hardened in place, and far fewer who dislike him are likely to vote for him again.

“If you’re a Trump voter, you don’t like him — you love him,” Frank Luntz, a veteran Republican pollster, said in an interview. “And nothing said by cable news or media is going to change that.”

He added, “But in the end, if you don’t like him, you’re just as passionate.”

Indeed, few voters express a mild view of Trump. In the Monmouth poll, 48% of the country had a “very unfavorabl­e” view of him, while just 9% had a “somewhat unfavorabl­e” opinion.

For Biden, that wasn’t the case.

“With Biden, you see a much more even split in his unfavorabi­lity rating,” Cecil said. “Among swing voters — to the extent that we have a shrinking number of swing voters — their views of Trump are much more intense than their views of Biden.”

Most Democrats and Republican­s continue to express a positive opinion of their party’s presumptiv­e nominee. But while Trump enjoys his strongest support from Republican­s and conservati­ves, Biden continues to struggle among certain key components of the Democratic base. Onethird of liberals said they saw Biden unfavorabl­y, according to the latest Monmouth poll, and only 19% of them said they held a “very favorable” view of him.

By contrast, Trump enjoyed some of his strongest support from conservati­ve voters, most of whom saw him very favorably.

And among young people, typically a Democratic strong suit, Biden’s numbers remain anemic months after Sen. Bernie Sanders — his main rival for the Democratic nomination, who had the loyal support of most young voters — left the race. Fifty-nine percent of Americans under 35 said they saw Biden negatively, per Monmouth. Only 8% expressed a very positive view of him.

Young people were particular­ly dissatisfi­ed with their options: Those under 35 made up half of all the voters who saw neither candidate favorably.

All of this bodes poorly for Biden’s ability to excite his base — and indeed, 32% of Democrats in that poll said they were less enthusiast­ic than usual about voting in this year’s election. Among Republican­s, only 12% said so.

But Trump’s inability to win over voters closer to the political middle could be a far graver problem than Biden’s mushy support on the left. Most political moderates tend to say they like Biden, and his net favorabili­ty rating among this group was +14 in the Monmouth poll.

Trump, on the other hand, is viewed quite negatively by most of those middle-path voters. Fully 57% of moderates expressed a “very unfavorabl­e” view of him in the Monmouth survey; overall, his net favorabili­ty rating among them was -39.

“It’s not that they embrace or like Biden, so much as that they dislike Trump,” Luntz said.

The latest Quinnipiac University poll contains evidence that Biden has room to grow. Unlike most, that survey offered respondent­s the option to say they hadn’t heard enough to make up their minds on how they saw him. Twelve percent of respondent­s said they needed more informatio­n about Biden before they decided. Just 3% said so about Trump.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? There are specifics to negative polling that offer insights into the weaknesses that Democrat Joe Biden, left, and Republican Donald Trump will need to address as their campaigns enter the summer.
The Associated Press There are specifics to negative polling that offer insights into the weaknesses that Democrat Joe Biden, left, and Republican Donald Trump will need to address as their campaigns enter the summer.
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