Friday, September 9, 2016

Oy Vey God Save America from Donny T .Too Early to Call.Polls shift again to Blue but in the words of the great American statesman Yogi Berra: It ain't over 'till it's over.



Too Early to Call.Polls shift from week to week in the ever-changing presidential election by Mary Kate Cary  ( republished  with permission of the author and US News and World Report)


Last week in this space, my colleague and friend Robert Schlesinger wrote about six factors to watch in the race between Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton. Since Robert wrote his column, many of those factors have changed. Let me point out a few I've noticed:

Poll position. Like many on the left, Robert wants us all to believe that Clinton's basically got this in the bag. "By and large she has maintained a clear lead over Trump in the polls," he writes, and has done so in enough states to put her over the 270 electoral-vote mark. Not so fast, my friend. She hasn't won it yet.


Just since last week, the polls have started moving. The Washington Post's mammoth 50-state poll that came out over Labor Day had a number of surprises in it: in a head-to-head matchup, Clinton leads by four points or more in 20 states and D.C., for a total of 244 electoral votes. According to the Post, Trump leads by four points in 20 states as well, which only add up to 126 electoral votes. The remaining ten states – which hold 168 electoral votes – are a tossup. Robert points to other news outlets such as NBC which put Clinton over the 270 mark, but it's far from unanimous. What's surprising is how many tossup states are in play. The Post reports Trump has a small lead in Iowa and Ohio, and is close in normally blue Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania.


Another big surprise: traditionally Republican Texas is in a dead heat, and Florida, Arizona and Georgia are close. But as fivethirtyeight.com's Nate Silver points out, "Trump is more likely to win the Electoral College while losing the popular vote than the other way around. Some of this is for a quirky reason: Trump is underperforming recent Republican nominees in polls of deeply red states." Silver's observation: If Clinton lost traditional Republican states by say, 10 points instead of 20, that might help her win a bigger share of the popular vote, but won't help her in the Electoral College.

Over Labor Day weekend, the L.A. Times put the two nominees in a tie, and the CNN/ORC poll had Trump up by one point – and winning independents by a whopping 20 points. Clinton's lead in the RealClearPolitics average has shrunk from eight to ten points after the Democratic convention to just three, and she remains below 50 percent.

And of course there's this from last week: the stunning 2-to-1 margin by which likely Nevada voters prefer an "arrogant ass" over an "unrepentant criminal," and a "loud-mouth jerk" over a "habitual liar." Wow.

Robert makes a good point that both campaigns are running out of time, since early voting is about to start in a number of states. As long as Clinton's email problems stay front and center – every day seems to bring a new revelation – I'm not sure I'd want early voting to start now if I were her. And although Robert cites a recent Quinnipiac poll showing 90 percent of voters have made up their minds, that's not my sense of things. Nate Silver reports the degree of uncertainty is "higher than people might assume," at 20 percent of the electorate, compared to 5 to 10 percent at this point four years ago. It still feels to me like there are a lot of voters waiting to see how the debates go. I'd be willing to bet these will be some of the most-watched debates in history. All Trump has to do is appear to be a somewhat credible alternative to her, and he may pick up those undecideds.

Trump: The Pivot. Robert says there is "abundant evidence" that Trump does not have the self-discipline necessary to pivot to a general election campaign. In one of the most interesting focus groups I've seen, last week pollster Frank Luntz interviewed 24 Pennsylvania voters who were previously for Trump. By the end of the conversation, 15 out of 24 of them said he would "win the election if he gets himself under control." That says to me that they're not quitting him yet.

I'll agree Clinton clearly has an advantage over Trump in terms of state offices, ground organization, television ads and the like, all of which made the difference in previous elections. Robert might want to ask Ted Cruz what his impressive ground game has done for him lately. Same with television ads – ask Jeb Bush what over $100 million in television advertising did for him this cycle. Traditional TV ads this year are not having the same effect they've had in the past. Exhibit A: Clinton is outspending Trump by 5-to-1 on television ads in the two biggest advertising markets in the U.S. – Orlando and Tampa – yet she remains statistically tied in Florida in the Post's 50-state poll. Instead, 2016 voters are turning to social media to get their political news, increasingly on a mobile device. The Trump campaign has made up for its lack of ground operations by using social media very effectively. None of the "rules" from previous elections seem to hold any longer.


Trump on the Hill. "The extent to which there is a Trump drag remains unclear," Robert writes about down-ballot races. But just after Labor Day, Politico's headline read, "GOP: Trump Won't Cost Us Congress." My sense is that there will likely be a lot of ticket-splitting by voters. One thing to note: there haven't been any big primary upsets this cycle – no Eric Cantor-type surprises. Both Paul Ryan and John McCain were supposedly in late-summer "tough" primaries, and both won easily.

The enthusiasm gap. Robert talks about the lower number of Republicans who support Trump than Democrats who support Clinton, but that's changing as well. The CNN/ORC poll says 92 percent of Democrats back Clinton, and 90 percent of Republicans now back Trump, the same number who supported Romney. According to CNN, the lack of enthusiasm is across the board: 46 percent say they are extremely or very enthusiastic, compared with 57 percent at this point in 2012. However, "the lack of enthusiasm spikes among Clinton supporters," reports CNN. "A majority of Clinton's supporters say they're less excited about voting this year than usual (55 percent) while most of Trump's backers say they're more excited this time around (56 percent)." Again, the political sands seem to be shifting.

RATs – or Republicans Against Trump. There's been a lot of talk about members of the GOP who either oppose Trump or have endorsed Clinton. Let's talk about Democrats who are uncomfortable with Clinton, some of whom are die-hard Sanders supporters. Clinton supporters have been dismissive about her email scandal, but the pay-for-play allegations at the Clinton Foundation are a different animal. Even Clinton boosters see the problem when they hear that Bill Clinton received $18 million for serving as the "honorary chancellor" of a for-profit college while his wife was secretary of state. Or that more than half of the people outside of the government who met with Secretary Clinton gave money to the Clinton Foundation. No wonder former DNC chairman and Gov. Ed Rendell called for her to shut down the Clinton Foundation if she is elected. The New York Times editorial board said she shouldn't even wait for the election to cut ties with it. I'd say if you're the Democratic nominee and you've lost The New York Times editorial board, you've got a problem.

The other shoe. Robert and I agree that it's only a matter of time before another shoe drops and more emails come to light. We know the Russians have hacked the Clinton Foundation, the Clinton campaign and the DNC. Julian Assange announced after Labor Day that he may release the batch he's got as soon as next week. Fasten your seatbelt.

Regular readers know that I'm no Trump supporter. But Clinton fans should remember the words of the great American statesman Yogi Berra: It ain't over 'till it's over.


Mary Kate Cary CONTRIBUTING EDITO
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Mary Kate Cary is a former White House speechwriter for President George H.W. Bush. She currently writes speeches for political and business leaders, and is a contributing editor for U.S. News & World Report.

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