JakeStarkey
Diamond Member
- Aug 10, 2009
- 168,037
- 16,524
- 2,165
- Banned
- #1
There is a lot of sense in this article. He remains strong in his core group, but he is not reducing the margins with women, blacks, browns, millennials, asians, and, probably, pizza drivers and den mothers and MLB.
He is doing better than expected in OH and IA, probably because of older white voters, but he is struggling in places he should be doing much better: GA, AZ, and TX, of all place.
Either he wakes up or Clinton drops dead, or he is going back to NY for good when this is all over.
A new 50-state poll shows exactly why Clinton holds the advantage over Trump
With nine weeks until Election Day, Donald Trump is within striking distance in the Upper Midwest, but Hillary Clinton’s strength in many battlegrounds and some traditional Republican strongholds gives her a big electoral college advantage, according to a 50-state Washington Post-SurveyMonkey poll.
The survey of all 50 states is the largest sample ever undertaken by The Post, which joined with SurveyMonkey and its online polling resources to produce the results. The state-by-state numbers are based on responses from more than 74,000 registered voters during the period of Aug. 9 to Sept. 1. The individual state samples vary in size from about 550 to more than 5,000, allowing greater opportunities than typical surveys to look at different groups within the population and compare them from state to state.
He is doing better than expected in OH and IA, probably because of older white voters, but he is struggling in places he should be doing much better: GA, AZ, and TX, of all place.
Either he wakes up or Clinton drops dead, or he is going back to NY for good when this is all over.
A new 50-state poll shows exactly why Clinton holds the advantage over Trump
With nine weeks until Election Day, Donald Trump is within striking distance in the Upper Midwest, but Hillary Clinton’s strength in many battlegrounds and some traditional Republican strongholds gives her a big electoral college advantage, according to a 50-state Washington Post-SurveyMonkey poll.
The survey of all 50 states is the largest sample ever undertaken by The Post, which joined with SurveyMonkey and its online polling resources to produce the results. The state-by-state numbers are based on responses from more than 74,000 registered voters during the period of Aug. 9 to Sept. 1. The individual state samples vary in size from about 550 to more than 5,000, allowing greater opportunities than typical surveys to look at different groups within the population and compare them from state to state.