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What the first swing-state primary in Michigan told us about Biden-Trump rematch

- Alexander Panetta

After Iowa, New Hamp‐ shire, and South Carolina, a major swing state has fi‐ nally voted in a 2024 U.S. presidenti­al primary, offer‐ ing some electoral tea leaves to read.

The main takeaway from Tuesday's Michigan primary: Two vulnerable candidates are barrelling toward the nomination of their respec‐ tive parties.

Joe Biden and Donald Trump each cruised to vic‐ tory in Tuesday's vote. But the results also revealed blinking warning lights up ahead.

Here are the takeaways. With one positive, and one negative, for each of the likely presidenti­al nominees.

A Gaza warning for Biden

There has been evidence for months that the war in Gaza has angered many De‐ mocrats and risks costing Biden some of the votes helped him win in 2020.

Tuesday night was the first major electoral test of that, in the swing state with the highest population of Arab Americans.

A large number of Michi‐ ganders turned out to protest Biden's support for Israel. Approximat­ely 13 per cent of Democratic voters lodged a protest vote, with more than 100,000 declaring themselves uncommitte­d.

This followed a campaign by progressiv­es and Democ‐ rats like congresswo­man Rashida Tlaib, who said their goal was to send Biden a warning.

"This is the way we can use our democracy to say, 'Listen. Listen to Michigan. Listen to the families that have been directly im‐ pacted,'" said Tlaib, who is of Palestinia­n origin and has rel‐ atives there.

On Tuesday night, orga‐ nizers of the protest immedi‐ ately declared victory.

It was the largest-ever number of such uncommit‐ ted voters in a Michigan pri‐ mary, with the exception of an unusual intra-party dis‐ pute in 2008 where several candidates, including Barack Obama, didn't appear on the primary ballot.

It was also the largest per‐ centage to ever vote uncom‐ mitted in Michigan, surpass‐ ing the 10.7 per cent who did so when Obama was up for re-election in 2012.

Those numbers will cause some hand-wringing in the White House, given how a protest vote in November could easily swing the elec‐ tion in closely-fought states.

Michigan is a prime exam‐ ple of a state where almost every vote counts.

In 2016, Trump won Michigan by just 0.3 per‐ centage points (fewer than 11,000 votes), and Biden won it in 2020 by 2.8 percentage points (about 154,000 votes).

But don't declare these numbers as calamitous for Biden just yet.

There's no telling how many of the protest voters will actually oppose him in November. Or whether they will be numerous enough to change the election result.

Just look at what hap‐ pened in 2012. After being rebuked by so many uncom‐ mitted voters in the primary, Obama went on to win the state of Michigan in the gen‐ eral election by almost 10 percentage points and he was easily re-elected.

WATCH | In Michigan, some Democrats send a protest message to Biden: Good news for Biden There were bright silver linings on the evening for Biden. He appears to have squashed, easily, long shot primary challenges against him.

Biden appeared poised to get more than 80 per cent of the Democratic vote. His most significan­t challenger, congressma­n Dean Phillips, registered a paltry couple of percentage points.

But that's not all.

Biden overperfor­med in polls - again. There hasn't been much polling of Democ‐ ratic primary races, but he appeared to finish 10 per‐ centage points higher than in his surveys in the state.

It's becoming a pattern. Biden outperform­ed a similar survey in South Carolina by a whopping 30 percentage points, winning 94 per cent of that state's primary.

More than that, Democra‐ ts have done well in recent elections, including a byelec‐ tion this month in New York City where they won the seat of disgraced lawmaker George Santos seat by 13 points.

All of which might give De‐ mocrats some hope that they, and Biden, are in better shape this year than the polls suggest. Because the polls lately suggest they are losing to Trump.

Trump's primary fight: It's over

Trump is not officially the presumptiv­e nominee for the Republican­s. Not yet. That ti‐ tle officially gets conferred af‐ ter a candidate locks up a majority of convention dele‐ gates, which in his case is ex‐ pected to happen within the next three weeks.

Make no mistake: It's hap‐ pening.

After easily defeating Nik‐ ki Haley in her home state of South Carolina last weekend, Trump has won a sixth state or territoria­l primary. In Michigan, Trump trounced his former cabinet member by about 68 per cent to 26 per cent, with a fraction of the votes still being counted.

Another encouragin­g sign for Trump was the far higher Republican than Democratic turnout. It's hard to make an apples-to-apples compari‐ son, as the races are differ‐ ent, one involving a sitting president and the other a former one making a come‐ back.

But in this first contest of 2024 where Biden and Trump appeared on ballots on the same night, about one-quar‐ ter more Republican­s showed up than Democrats.

A Democratic lawmaker from Michigan said she ex‐ pects a close election fight to last through November.

"This is going to be a tough election year," Debbie Dingell told CNN. "It's going to be a purple state until election day," meaning a competitiv­e state.

Trump repeatedly un‐ der-performing polls

Trump is steamrolle­ring his primary opposition. He barely even mentions Haley

anymore, and casts himself as already preparing for the general election.

He did briefly allude to Tuesday's primary results, calling his victory even more dominant than he had antici‐ pated.

"The numbers are far greater than we even antici‐ pated," Trump said.

But something unusual is happening with those num‐ bers. Unlike Biden, he is sig‐ nificantly under-performing his polls.

It's a confoundin­g pattern from the first few primaries. The former president is rack‐ ing up win after win. But he's not getting the margins he's seeing in surveys.

There are different theo‐ ries about why that's hap‐ pening. Is this a temporary phenomenon where pollsters are struggling to measure the number of Democrats voting in Republican primaries? Or is it a real problem for Trump?

In Iowa, his actual victory margin was four and five points smaller than in the polling numbers on two wellknown websites that aggre‐ gate surveys.

In New Hampshire, it was seven and eight points lower than on those two polling sites. In South Carolina, it was three and eight points lower than his polls.

In Michigan, his share of the electorate fell shy of his score in recent polls by about 10 points.

It's notable because so much has been made of the so-called shy Trump voter, who won't talk to a pollster but will turn out to vote. He famously outperform­ed sur‐ veys in 2016 and 2020.

His opponents will hope that the shy Trump voter is a thing of the past. And that they - not Trump - will have a surprising­ly strong showing this November.

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