• @kescusay@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This is worth some concern, but for fuck’s sake people… Remember how this year’s special elections were supposed to be all about Republican takeover of state legislatures? Or how 2022 was supposed to be a red wave?

    Stop. Breathe. The election is a year away. And polls are very troubled right now, due to the difficulty of polling a young populace that doesn’t answer its phones, but votes in unprecedented numbers.

    It’s not in the bag for Trump. Don’t give up hope almost a year before the first ballots are even cast.

    • @Telorand@reddthat.com
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      141 year ago

      This poll is only useful for political campaign strategists, political scientists, and anthropologists. For the average person, it doesn’t mean anything, because most people don’t vote based upon poll statistics.

      Vote. Help out local campaign efforts. Democracy isn’t just going to fall into our laps.

    • GodlessCommie
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      -11 year ago

      No candidate that ever polled this low in their 3rd year has ever won reelection

      • @kescusay@lemmy.world
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        411 months ago

        Ronald Reagan polled lower in his third year, but you’re missing the point. We’re in wholly uncharted polling territory, because the pollsters haven’t figured out how to poll young people who don’t answer unknown numbers calling their cellphones, and they’re voting in unprecedented numbers.

        In the mid-2010’s, the migration from landlines to cellphone-only households really got underway. We crossed the threshold where there were more cellphones than landlines in 2016, and it’s only continued from there. And an interesting thing started happening with polls around 2017 and 2018: They started consistently underestimating the strength of Democratic support in off-year and mid-term elections.

        It’s why the “red wave” in 2022 turned out to be a pink dribble. It’s why Democrats did so unexpectedly well in the 2021 special elections. It’s why they also did well this year.

        In 2024, people who were twelve years old in 2016 will be old enough to vote, and if the trends stay consistent, they will vote in droves. But none of them are answering pollster calls. And that makes polling them extraordinarily difficult.

        Pollsters try to account for such things by adjusting weights and making various assumptions that they hope are accurate, but in the end you need actual data from real voters, and that’s just plain getting harder to get.

        I’m not saying this poll looks good. It very much doesn’t. But at the same time, we shouldn’t fall into the trap of cynicism and apathy. It’s very possible this poll - like so many recent polls - is underestimating Democratic support.

        There is still hope.

  • @kylie_kraft@lemmy.world
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    231 year ago

    Jesus, the press is leaning hard into this Trump-as-Thanos, “I am inevitable” narrative. The moneyed class really, really wants to get back to the constant, dopey distractions from the not-so-invisible hand that’s been robbing all us poor schlubs blind.

    • იႦაႵმყიიႶ
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      -221 year ago

      And you guys lean into blindfolding yourself and shoving your head through quick drying cement to avoid any teensy little thing that makes you even slightly uncomfortable lol

  • AutoTL;DRB
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    21 year ago

    This is the best summary I could come up with:


    Former President Obama’s senior adviser David Axelrod said a recent Wall Street Journal poll showing President Biden’s approval rating hitting a new low is “very, very dark” for Biden’s reelection campaign.

    “You know, job approval down, ratings generally down, most of the comparatives with [former President] Trump … not good,” Axelrod said on the podcast “Hacks on Tap,” which he co-hosts with former White House press secretary Robert Gibbs and political media consultant Mike Murphy.

    In Denver on Nov. 29, the president spoke about investments from his Inflation Reduction Act with such signage at the stage.

    Axelrod also made an apparent reference to a recent CNN poll showing Trump with a 10-point lead over Biden in the battleground state of Michigan, to which Gibbs argued the Biden campaign needs to start “playing campaign in a far more concerted way.”

    His comments follow remarks he made last month in which he appeared to suggest Biden should drop out of the 2024 presidential race in the wake of a poll showing the incumbent trailing Trump.

    Following scrutiny for his comments, Axelrod clarified he is not concerned about poor polling numbers a year away from the 2024 election.


    The original article contains 610 words, the summary contains 195 words. Saved 68%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!

  • Semi-Hemi-Demigod
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    01 year ago

    For ordinary folks the economy hasn’t improved enough for Biden to start putting his name on it.