Unit2Sucks said:
calbear93 said:
Unit2Sucks said:
sycasey said:
The numbers are interesting, but I'm going to say that calling this a "contested" primary in the same way as your other historical examples isn't an apples-to-apples comparison. None of those had somebody who had already been President (besides the "unopposed" examples of course). Trump is effectively an incumbent without literally being an incumbent.
Exactly. To put this in perspective, and to help people understand why Trump is probably melting down behind closed doors right now, 66% of Iowa caucus voters yesterday believe Trump won the 2020 election and he still only got 51% of the vote. It was basically a MAGA rally and he still only managed to get 70% of those brain dead zombies who believed his election lies to stick with him.
Trump only got 11% of the vote amongst the people who weren't election deniers, which put him well behind Haley and Desantis. This is a horrible outcome for Trump.
Do you believe anyone other than Trump will be the Republican nominee after the Iowa caucus? For me, I think it's over on the primary.
With that said, the weakness you see in the Iowa Caucus for Trump - how would that help Biden in the general election? Any chance that those voting for DeSantis or Haley will vote for Biden over Trump? I would say that would be a small percentage.
I think Biden had more advantages in 2020 than he will in 2024. The COVID pandemic cratered what should have been an easy reelection for Trump. He was a disaster with the pandemic. And Biden was viewed as a unifier, a moderate, and someone who can get congress to move despite the crazies because of his history in Congress. I think he has more headwinds now, with fewer Republicans who crossed over to vote for Biden continuing to think in 2024 that he is a unifier or a moderate, middle class folks in Rust Belt feeling residual anger over inflation whose bad taste will not dissipate in their mouth anytime soon, loss of some union workers' support, more minorities (especially Hispanics) crossing over to Trump, the immigration issues that will be an anchor for Biden's chances in Arizona, and the issues with the senate election crossing over to the presidential election in Georgia no longer present in 2024.
We are all just guessing at this point, but I think people's exasperation with Trump over COVID has dissipated somewhat, even if he is trying to make up for it with his Hitler emulation and obsession with 2020 election. Strangely, all the legal actions against him may make him seem more like a martyr with some independents rallying to him. Strange how that works.
I think Biden is in danger, but you may be right and it may be fairly easy sailings for him. I don't pretend to be an expert on predicting elections. But I can tell you that I was a lot more hopeful about Biden in 2020 than I am now, even contributing to his campaign. Just one example, nowhere representing the broader voter trends in actual battleground states.
Did you seriously think Trump wasn't going to win the nomination? The vast majority of Republicans believe he is the incumbent. He has been bragging about being up 50 or 80 points on these other clowns. It's been obvious since day one that he wasn't going to lose to these people.
Whet you say about Trump in 2020 before the pandemic is absolutely true for Biden now. People value stability and Biden provides it. The economy is doing well. For the first time in decades, we aren't at war. Biden has stopped the indiscriminate drone strikes of his predecessors. Most of Trump's knocks on Biden are completely fabricated because he has nothing to hang his hat on.
To answer your question, no, I don't think many GOP voters will cross the line and vote blue but I think we'll see lower turnout amongst conservatives and higher turnout amongst progressives, particularly in states where abortion is on the ballot. As we've seen for the last few years, that has led to massive overperformance by democrats. Biden will win every state where abortion is on the ballot. Even the GOP is getting tired of Trump and isn't that motivated to show up. The Iowa caucus saw far lower turnout this cycle than in 2016. Trump's rallies are smaller and people leave earlier and earlier. I don't know where you are seeing so much strength for Trump where by most metrics he's far weaker than he was in 2020 when he lost the election by 7 million votes.
Trump has been the favorite, but I was "seriously" hoping Haley could pull it out. Now, I think it's done.
Forget about how you think the economy is doing (I don't think it's doing great, but I don't think it's doing poorly - but we had this discussion already). What do the voters in the battleground states think? When asked the question, does it seem like they believe the economy is doing well? Do they believe that foreign affairs are more stable, when they are seeing conflict in Ukraine, Middle East, China/Taiwan, North Korea? How do they feel about immigration? And it's not the views of people in Alabama, Oklahoma, California, or New York that will matter. It will be the views in the seven states, especially those states that Hillary lost that Biden carried. Your views or even data don't really matter. There is just so much cynicism to charts, statistics, etc. because they are always counter graph that they will go with their gut feeling.
Looking at this early polling in the battleground states that Biden won, Arizona and Georgia seem to be leaning meaningfully toward Trump, Wisconsin and Nevada seem to slightly toward Trump or even, Pennsylvania and Michigan seem to be slightly toward Biden or even, and Michigan swings widely from heavily toward Trump or slight toward Biden depending on the poll.
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/president-general/2024/You and I are both aware that the presidents are elected by state electors and not by the overall popular votes. He can win by 3 million in CA, and it will be the same as if he won by one vote. The only states that matter are the battleground states. So, saying he won by 7 million votes is just white noise.
I am also surprised that you think progressives will be more excited about Biden than conservatives will be about Trump. Grass is always greener on the other side, and there is always less excitement about an incumbent. I also don't think Trump will lose in states where abortion is on the ballot. I would assume Trump will continue to straddle both sides of this and say states should not take a hardline position on abortion.
Again, all speculation. If Trump loses, I think you and I would both be relieved, with you happy and me resigned that we ended up with a bad result but still the better result.