2024

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whiterock
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FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works? But +60% of voters think fraud affected the last election, so there clearly is a problem. The dangerous slippery slope is the preposterous notion that election fraud never happens, anywhere, anytime, and never have….

In a brighter note, looks like Trump and RDS have patched things up.

Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
The Supreme Court told the Colorado Supreme Court goodbye. 9-0.
"Never underestimate Joe's ability to **** things up!"

-- Barack Obama
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
The Supreme Court told the Colorado Supreme Court goodbye. 9-0.
On other grounds, and with this charge conspicuously unanswered. Even a Court that went out of its way to help Trump couldn't deny it with a straight face.
RD2WINAGNBEAR86
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
The Supreme Court told the Colorado Supreme Court goodbye. 9-0.
On other grounds, and with this charge conspicuously unanswered. Even a Court that went out of its way to help Trump couldn't deny it with a straight face.
Not even the justice that does not know what a woman is. Pretty clear and concise message from the Supreme Court.
"Never underestimate Joe's ability to **** things up!"

-- Barack Obama
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
Sorry, even your man Putin knows that's a weak excuse, Sam.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
KaiBear
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
The Supreme Court told the Colorado Supreme Court goodbye. 9-0.
On other grounds, and with this charge conspicuously unanswered. Even a Court that went out of its way to help Trump couldn't deny it with a straight face.



Reaching just a little too desperately sir.


Gotta know when to fold 'em.
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
whiterock
How long do you want to ignore this user?
KaiBear said:

Sam Lowry said:

RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
The Supreme Court told the Colorado Supreme Court goodbye. 9-0.
On other grounds, and with this charge conspicuously unanswered. Even a Court that went out of its way to help Trump couldn't deny it with a straight face.



Reaching just a little too desperately sir.


Gotta know when to fold 'em.
reaching desperately is what he does, to the nth degree....
FLBear5630
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works? But +60% of voters think fraud affected the last election, so there clearly is a problem. The dangerous slippery slope is the preposterous notion that election fraud never happens, anywhere, anytime, and never have….

In a brighter note, looks like Trump and RDS have patched things up.


Trump won 1 lawsuit of 64 after the 2020 election and not one was in his favor to overturn the votes in any State. Not one Court found evidence of fraud to throw the election. Trump and MAGA are the only ones that believe the election was stolen.

Should the votes counted? Different argument than fraud (fake votes). We will never know. Why? The idiot didn't take his AG's advice to go after the State Laws and how the election rules were set up. Trump preferred to believe Powell, Eastman and Guliani, rather than his own AG and White House Attorneys. He chose yes-men over people telling him the truth. Trump got outplayed, period.

PolitiFact | Trump did not win two-thirds of election lawsuits 'where merits considered'


Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
Let's put it this way. Colorado held that Trump engaged in insurrection. That holding still stands. It's not a slam dunk argument by any means, but at least it's an accurate one and better than anything Trump can cite.
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
Let's put it this way. Colorado held that Trump engaged in insurrection. That holding still stands. It's not a slam dunk argument by any means, but at least it's an accurate one and better than anything Trump can cite.
Let's be accurate: There was no trial to determine if Trump engaged in insurrection, the Colorado Clown College threw that out from their own dislike of Trump, and while the SCOTUS did not rule on that little bit of kangaroo court, since the Colorado abandonment of the Constitution on eligibility was so egregious, there are good reasons to believe that bit of bias would also have been struck down if necessary.

It's almost comedy how strained your definition of 'insurrection' has to become for it to be used against Trump with any kind of applicability. Says a lot more about those who want a Red Queen scenario than it does about Trump.

That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
Osodecentx
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
Let's put it this way. Colorado held that Trump engaged in insurrection. That holding still stands. It's not a slam dunk argument by any means, but at least it's an accurate one and better than anything Trump can cite.


The statement you debunked was "not 1 court found Trump " etc, etc. clearly 1 court did, even if it was correctly overruled later for other reasons
4th and Inches
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
LoL

They got B slapped by SCOTUS too
“Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.”

–Horace


“Insomnia sharpens your math skills because you spend all night calculating how much sleep you’ll get if you’re able to ‘fall asleep right now.’ “
Sam Lowry
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Oldbear83 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
Let's put it this way. Colorado held that Trump engaged in insurrection. That holding still stands. It's not a slam dunk argument by any means, but at least it's an accurate one and better than anything Trump can cite.
Let's be accurate: There was no trial to determine if Trump engaged in insurrection, the Colorado Clown College threw that out from their own dislike of Trump, and while the SCOTUS did not rule on that little bit of kangaroo court, since the Colorado abandonment of the Constitution on eligibility was so egregious, there are good reasons to believe that bit of bias would also have been struck down if necessary.

It's almost comedy how strained your definition of 'insurrection' has to become for it to be used against Trump with any kind of applicability. Says a lot more about those who want a Red Queen scenario than it does about Trump.


Literally none of that is accurate.
JXL
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
Sam Lowry
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JXL said:

Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
It was a finding of fact in a civil trial. Not unique, but a lower standard of proof.
Oldbear83
How long do you want to ignore this user?
Sam Lowry said:

Oldbear83 said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

Sam Lowry said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

whiterock said:

FLBear5630 said:

Mothra said:

Welp...

"Joe Biden is Now Beating Donald Trump in the Majority of Polls"

https://www.newsweek.com/joe-biden-donald-trump-polls-presidential-election-2024-1888914

Joe Biden is now beating Donald Trump in the majority of recent polls, just seven months before the presidential election.

Last month it was confirmed that the pair will face off against each other in November, with Biden and Trump both winning enough delegates to secure their respective parties' presidential nomination and teeing up a rematch of the 2020 election.

Since then, analysis has turned to who will come up on top. So far, polls have been fairly evenly split, with commentators suggesting the race is too close to call.

While that remains the case, polls appear to be moving in Biden's favor. The Democratic incumbent is predicted to win the popular vote in eight of the twelve most recent polls added to the RacetotheWH website, which tracks average polling.

In the most recent of these polls, which was done by Reuters and Ipsos, the Democrat is expected to garner 41 percent of the vote share while Trump is predicted to win 37 percent of the vote. Ipsos polled 833 registered voters between April 5 and 9 in this survey.

In another poll of 1,265 registered voters conducted between April 3 and 5 by IBD/TIPP, Biden is predicted to win the popular vote with a 3 percentage point lead, 43 percent to 40 percent.

Meanwhile a Marquette poll of 674 likely voters, conducted between March 18 and March 28, suggested Biden will get 52 percent of the vote and that Trump will get 48 percent of the vote share.

However, other polls suggest Trump might have more supporters come election day. One poll of 6,236 registered voters by Morning Consult predicted that the Republican will win 44 percent of the vote share compared to Biden's 43 percent.

Another by Emerson College of 1,438 registered voters suggested Trump will take 51 percent of the vote and that Biden would get 49 percent of the vote. This poll was conducted between April 2 and 3.
Newsweek contacted representatives for Biden and Trump by email to comment on this story.

Despite apparent positive polling for Biden, Christopher Phelps, a professor of modern American history at the University of Nottingham in the U.K., told Newsweek the race was "far too close to call."

He said: "There are any number of polls and determining which ones to give weight is difficult. That said, the greatest priority should not be given to the national polls but the polls that target the specific battleground states that have been most competitive in recent elections and are crucial for the Electoral College.
"These polls do not have a clear consensus. The Wall Street Journal just published a poll that showed Biden down in all but one of the eight battleground states. Other polls show Biden edging ahead in those states."
He continued: "By any measure, the race at this distance from November is far too close to call. And there are so many remaining wild cards. Will voters believe the economy is improving? Will the Israel-Gaza situation be somewhat resolved? Will women vote heavily on abortion rights? How much will voters prioritize immigration? Will Trump be found guilty in one of the many criminal trials against him? Will Biden have an episode that revives attention to his age? On any of these known unknowns, the race could hinge.
"We just can't know the outcome at this great distance in time."


This poll doesn't count. It doesn't tell the right story.

Watch the spin... The Trump machine will get them right...
Mothra's post is a Biden best case scenario/spin. It would be equally accurate to say that most of the polls also show the two candidates locked in a statistical dead heat nationally, in the low 40-point range (give or take a few points), with a range of 6-12 points undecided (depending on the poll).

Rule of thumb: when an incumbent has support levels significantly below 50-points, the vast majority of the undecided break for the challenger, go third party, or simply do not vote.

Biden is, in most of the polls, running between 38-45% support. That is an incredibly bad place for an incumbent to be, hail-mary territory. And all of that concerns national polling, not swing state polling, where Trump has maintained consistent statistically significant leads (at or outside the margin of error) in all but one state (WI). Now, Obama was in this situation heading into 2012, and he pulled it off. Can Biden do what Obama did? Yes, Obama is helping him (arguably actually running things). But Obama is not going to be ON the ticket, so you can't make the two interchangeable. Biden will be a drag = no chance he will be able to do 100% of what Obama did.

When a GOP candidate is locked in a dead head nationally and is ahead in swing states.....well, that's about as good as a GOP candidate has been able to do in the post-Reagan era. Good rule of thumb for a GOP candidate is, if you're tied nationally, you are likely in about as good a place as you can hope to be. Almost all polls show that's where the race is....tied....statistically speaking.


Of course it is. Trump is a lock. That is the only message that is acceptable. Not just on this Board, but all over. The Bannon machine is squashing any dissenting opinion.

Just wondering what happens if Trump loses? Must of been stolen? Civil War?
I didn't say that. Just noting the full perspective. By almost every normal yardstick, the fall election should be very difficult for Democrats to win. There's really only one scenario where the outcome is seriously in doubt - the one that says Trump is so toxic that he cannot win, no way, no how, and anyone who says otherwise is a mind-numbed Trumpbot. Except, he's won once before (with far less preparation), he's won the primary, and he's ahead in most Electoral College projections. In no small part it's because he has a far better campaign team than he had in 2016 or 2020.

If Democrats steal another one, things will get more contentious than they were last time.
And yet we have both 2016 and 2020. Trump should have won 2020 and lost. Clinton should have won 2016 and lost. By every metric, Biden should lose. Yet, elections are funny things. And no I do not prescribe to the stolen election in 2020, too many states and too many votes for it not to show up. You know the analysis capabilities of the US, it would show.
you badly mis-analyze the fraud issue. A good machine in 5-6 major US cities can easily decide a close election, and did in 2020.
In 2016, Trump overperformed the polling and won.
In 2020, Trump overperformed the polling and would have won had fraud not have been an issue in 3-4 states.

Trump is already ahead in most swing state polling. If hie overperforms the polls again, he will win an electoral landslide. A popular vote win is even possible within the current range of polls, before we even get to over/underperformance questions.

We're also seeing some interesting fundraising trends. A snippet from my Taibbi subscription:

"TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM THE TRUCKING INDUSTRY FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $291,719
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $36,790
  • Joe Biden, $35,877
TOTAL MONETARY DONATIONS FROM "HEDGE FUNDS AND PRIVATE EQUITY" FOR EACH MAJOR PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE, 2024 CYCLE as of April 10, OpenSecrets.Org:
  • Donald Trump, $1,134,035
  • Robert F. Kennedy, Jr., $75,949
  • Joe Biden, $68,871

Now, it's early and these total will change. But when you're performing well with both high finance and truck drivers, you are in a good place.

Stop with the fraud. He lost. Not one court has found that the election was stolen. You are usually heavy on data. There is no fraud until it is proven. Same with Dems in 2016 and all the tampering, October surprise and popular vote crap. She lost. Donald lost.

Will 2024 go his way? We will see. But, win or lose, unless there is provable fraud that can stand up to legal challenges there is no stolen elections. What you guys are pushing is a dangerous, slippery slope.

Not one court has found that Trump attempted to overturn the last ejection, or commit insurrection, or……. See how that works?
The Colorado Supreme Court says hello.
and got overturned.....
Let's put it this way. Colorado held that Trump engaged in insurrection. That holding still stands. It's not a slam dunk argument by any means, but at least it's an accurate one and better than anything Trump can cite.
Let's be accurate: There was no trial to determine if Trump engaged in insurrection, the Colorado Clown College threw that out from their own dislike of Trump, and while the SCOTUS did not rule on that little bit of kangaroo court, since the Colorado abandonment of the Constitution on eligibility was so egregious, there are good reasons to believe that bit of bias would also have been struck down if necessary.

It's almost comedy how strained your definition of 'insurrection' has to become for it to be used against Trump with any kind of applicability. Says a lot more about those who want a Red Queen scenario than it does about Trump.


Literally none all of that is accurate.
FIFY
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier
JXL
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Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
It was a finding of fact in a civil trial. Not unique, but a lower standard of proof.


What's unique is finding someone guilty of a crime in a civil trial.
Sam Lowry
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JXL said:

Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
It was a finding of fact in a civil trial. Not unique, but a lower standard of proof.


What's unique is finding someone guilty of a crime in a civil trial.
He wasn't found guilty. The court found that he engaged in insurrection.
4th and Inches
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Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
It was a finding of fact in a civil trial. Not unique, but a lower standard of proof.


What's unique is finding someone guilty of a crime in a civil trial.
He wasn't found guilty. The court found that he engaged in insurrection.
and SCOTUS found that their finding wasnt applicable in any meaningful way.

Congress had their chance and Jack is having his chance.. CO had no standing in the first place to make a ruling on it.
“Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.”

–Horace


“Insomnia sharpens your math skills because you spend all night calculating how much sleep you’ll get if you’re able to ‘fall asleep right now.’ “
whiterock
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Osodecentx
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whiterock said:





Yep
$800 billion in debt service
whiterock
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Fascinating. Tracks seamlessly with conclusions about party realignment and Trump support with low-propensity voters. Means the bigger the turnout, the harder it will be for Biden to beat Trump. Converse is true as well.

Sam Lowry
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4th and Inches said:

Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Sam Lowry said:

JXL said:

Isn't insurrection a crime under 18 U.S.C. 2383? Did Colorado find him guilty of a crime in a civil trial? One would think that would be unique.
It was a finding of fact in a civil trial. Not unique, but a lower standard of proof.


What's unique is finding someone guilty of a crime in a civil trial.
He wasn't found guilty. The court found that he engaged in insurrection.
and SCOTUS found that their finding wasnt applicable in any meaningful way.

Congress had their chance and Jack is having his chance.. CO had no standing in the first place to make a ruling on it.
As Trump supporters constantly reminded us during the 2020 election lawsuits, standing has nothing to do with the merits of the case.
whiterock
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KaiBear
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The popular demand of the right to kill babies is going to help Joe Biden immensely.

It's incredible how that issue supersedes everything else with so many people.
whiterock
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KaiBear said:

The popular demand of the right to kill babies is going to help Joe Biden immensely.

It's incredible how that issue supersedes everything else with so many people.
the wealthier among us tend to forget that, for most people, their "principles" are all they have.

And the further we (as a society) drift from religion, the more politics will take its place as the primary focus of aspirations.

boognish_bear
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Waco1947
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boognish_bear said:


Good news
Waco1947
4th and Inches
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Waco1947 said:

boognish_bear said:


Good news
lol, you do realize national polls dont mean squat right?
“Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.”

–Horace


“Insomnia sharpens your math skills because you spend all night calculating how much sleep you’ll get if you’re able to ‘fall asleep right now.’ “
Waco1947
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4th and Inches said:

Waco1947 said:

boognish_bear said:


Good news
lol, you do realize national polls dont mean squat right?
Yes, lol, I do but it is sad my Texas counts for nothing.
Waco1947
GrowlTowel
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Waco1947 said:

4th and Inches said:

Waco1947 said:

boognish_bear said:


Good news
lol, you do realize national polls dont mean squat right?
Yes, lol, I do but it is sad my Texas counts for nothing.
Which is why Texas continues to thrive as a state.
Your ideas are intriguing to me, and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.
4th and Inches
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Waco1947 said:

4th and Inches said:

Waco1947 said:

boognish_bear said:


Good news
lol, you do realize national polls dont mean squat right?
Yes, lol, I do but it is sad my Texas counts for nothing.
very binary way of viewing your vote

You can always enjoy voting for crazy ass liberals in the local elections
“Mix a little foolishness with your serious plans. It is lovely to be silly at the right moment.”

–Horace


“Insomnia sharpens your math skills because you spend all night calculating how much sleep you’ll get if you’re able to ‘fall asleep right now.’ “
Waco1947
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4th and Inches said:

Waco1947 said:

4th and Inches said:

Waco1947 said:

boognish_bear said:


Good news
lol, you do realize national polls dont mean squat right?
Yes, lol, I do but it is sad my Texas counts for nothing.
very binary way of viewing your vote

You can always enjoy voting for crazy ass liberals in the local elections
I enjoy voting for sane Democrats
Waco1947
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