GOP cant be the party of NO if they are in charge.. they have been trained to be the minority party and have no idea what to do when placed in charge..Sam Lowry said:That's going to be the excuse for every defeat from here on out. It obviates any need to re-think Republican strategy, which is actually quite convenient...for the Democrats.whiterock said:I can understand where you are coming from on that question.RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:The Dems will see to it that Donald Trump will never, ever win another election. By any means necessary, - legal and/ or illegal. The blueprint from the 2020 Election will be repeated. Who is going to stop them? Nobody.Cobretti said:CNN's Harry Enten: "The polling indicates that Trump is, in fact, in a stronger position at this point than he was during the entire 2020 campaign...If we had state level polling, I wouldn’t even be surprised if Trump were ahead in the swing states that are most important." pic.twitter.com/fzTd3JYskv
— MAGA War Room (@MAGAIncWarRoom) August 20, 2023
But what Republican WOULD the Dems "allow" to get elected?
If you believe that part in bold, the you are tacitly admitting that the GOP will never win another election due to the system being rigged against them.
whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
I'm still with you on the election-related claims. But, how can you say this about the documents and obstruction? It's been months, and I've still not found a single legal scholar or expert arguing that, if true, the document/obstruction allegations are not crimes.whiterock said:Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
The problem with your last point there is that the charges against him are not supported by any evidence, either.
Unfortunately for Trump, that's simply not accurate. If you listen to any of the legal commentators who have analyzed the charges, the documents charge is strong, and it's clear he mishandled documents. Bob Barr is a guy I respect, and he's said that Trump is going to get convicted most likely on this one, as the evidence is so clear. Now, it's a mere process crime, so I doubt he gets any time for that, but he could. We will see.whiterock said:Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
The problem with your last point there is that the charges against him are not supported by any evidence, either.
That would be great if it were true. Unfortunately, it's not even close to true.whiterock said:Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
The problem with your last point there is that the charges against him are not supported by any evidence, either.
I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
I think at this point we could find a poll to please anyone. All over the map......sombear said:I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
Unrelated to 538, 3 polls out showing Biden up on Trump 3-6 points. Two new Biden approval polls, 47 and 43. And generic ballot Dem 45 GOP 42. No bueno.
The RICO stuff is a pile of wild-ass allegations turning every political campaign strategy session into a criminal enterprise.....it's an office-holder abusing power to indict an opponent on allegations that completely legal activity is somehow a criminal conspiracy because the office-holder doesn't like it. The whole thing, office holder and charges, are a dire threat to the First Amendment liberties of half the country.OsoCoreyell said:That would be great if it were true. Unfortunately, it's not even close to true.whiterock said:Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
The problem with your last point there is that the charges against him are not supported by any evidence, either.
Show me 2 actual pollsters that have Trump's approvals higher than Biden and I'll at least partially agree . . . .whiterock said:I think at this point we could find a poll to please anyone. All over the map......sombear said:I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
Unrelated to 538, 3 polls out showing Biden up on Trump 3-6 points. Two new Biden approval polls, 47 and 43. And generic ballot Dem 45 GOP 42. No bueno.
There are several that not only have him ahead in support, but winning independents by a margin greater than the overall margin.sombear said:Show me 2 actual pollsters that have Trump's approvals higher than Biden and I'll at least partially agree . . . .whiterock said:I think at this point we could find a poll to please anyone. All over the map......sombear said:I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
Unrelated to 538, 3 polls out showing Biden up on Trump 3-6 points. Two new Biden approval polls, 47 and 43. And generic ballot Dem 45 GOP 42. No bueno.
I've always thought approvals were better barometers than head-to-head, but see your point.whiterock said:There are several that not only have him ahead in support, but winning independents by a margin greater than the overall margin.sombear said:Show me 2 actual pollsters that have Trump's approvals higher than Biden and I'll at least partially agree . . . .whiterock said:I think at this point we could find a poll to please anyone. All over the map......sombear said:I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
Unrelated to 538, 3 polls out showing Biden up on Trump 3-6 points. Two new Biden approval polls, 47 and 43. And generic ballot Dem 45 GOP 42. No bueno.
I'm not contesting that "approvals" matter, just noting that "approval rate" is not synonymous with "who do you intend to vote for." That is particularly true given the "margin of error" separation between the two guys in almost every poll, regardless of who's on top or bottom.
We will indeed have people making the eminently rational choice to vote for Trump despite thinking Biden is a nicer guy.
Al Sharpton argues @NikkiHaley is betraying her brown skin by criticizing Kamala Harris: “She’s also playing to certain elements of the Republican Party on race that you talk about President Harris, who is — who is she? A black woman and a — and woman. And I think for Nikki… pic.twitter.com/MPbmwGyRgL
— Curtis Houck (@CurtisHouck) August 28, 2023
🚨 NATIONAL POLL: @wearebigvillage (B-)
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 29, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 44% (+1)
(D) Biden 43%
.
(D) Biden 43% (+3)
(R) DeSantis 40%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 57% (+43)
DeSantis 14%
Ramaswamy 9%
Pence 6%
Haley 5%
.
H2H:
Trump 70% (+40)
DeSantis 30%
——
RVs | 702 (R's) | 8/25-26https://t.co/guWQbkV17P
🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 29, 2023
PRES:
(D) Biden 45% (+1)
(R) Trump 44%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 59% (+45)
DeSantis 14%
Ramaswamy 8%
Pence 6%
Haley 3%
Christie 2%
Scott 2%
——
DEM PRES:
Biden 66% (+53)
Kennedy Jr 13%
Williamson 7%
——@Harris_X_ | 2,013 RV | 8/24-26https://t.co/X8aWCSFfmt
🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 29, 2023
PRES:
(D) Biden 43% (+1)
(R) Trump 42%
.
(D) Biden 43% (+4)
(R) DeSantis 39%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 58% (+44)
DeSantis 14%
Ramaswamy 10%
Pence 6%
Haley 5%
Christie 3%
Scott 2%
Hutchinson 1%
Morning Consult | 5,000 RV | 8/25-27 pic.twitter.com/LYMMir7Eon
Virginia 2024: Trump holds 35-point lead for Republican Nomination
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 29, 2023
Trump 48% (+1)
DeSantis 13% (-15)
Youngkin 9% (new)
Pence 7%
Scott 6% (+5)
Ramaswamy 5% (new)
Christie 3% (new)
Haley 2% (-5)
[Change vs May]@RoanokeCollege | August 6-15https://t.co/zfE522zLb9 pic.twitter.com/1MorMAUje9
Why does Virginia hate Nikki Haley? Am a little skeptical about this poll.whiterock said:
Youngkin making a case for being VPVirginia 2024: Trump holds 35-point lead for Republican Nomination
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 29, 2023
Trump 48% (+1)
DeSantis 13% (-15)
Youngkin 9% (new)
Pence 7%
Scott 6% (+5)
Ramaswamy 5% (new)
Christie 3% (new)
Haley 2% (-5)
[Change vs May]@RoanokeCollege | August 6-15https://t.co/zfE522zLb9 pic.twitter.com/1MorMAUje9
4th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
The worst president in my lifetime is ahead of Trump in a poll 43-424th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
thats not what i meant and you know it.. why cant any GOP canidate come close?Osodecentx said:The worst president in my lifetime is ahead of Trump in a poll 43-424th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
Please inform me under what circumstances does Trump beat Gavin in the 2024 general election .4th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
well, has Gavin declared? If he isnt running then he cant beat Trump..KaiBear said:Please inform me under what circumstances does Trump beat Gavin in the 2024 general election .4th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
That means the race is competitive and we need all hands on deck.Osodecentx said:The worst president in my lifetime is ahead of Trump in a poll 43-424th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
no current polling that I can find, but I would suspect this would be in the ballpark:KaiBear said:Please inform me under what circumstances does Trump beat Gavin in the 2024 general election .4th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
I know what you meant. Do you know what I meant?4th and Inches said:thats not what i meant and you know it.. why cant any GOP canidate come close?Osodecentx said:The worst president in my lifetime is ahead of Trump in a poll 43-424th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
2 incumbent presidents below 50%
https://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/polls/
Also, 43-42 is trash as neither are close to 50 and well within the MOE
It's not that everybody hates Trump. It's that half the country hates Trump with the passion of a thousand burning suns, while less than half of the country - but a majority of Republicans - think the guy can do no wrong.4th and Inches said:
As much as yall claim everybody hates Trump.. why is it that nobody can poll even close to him?
While I don't disagree with this, you must surely realize that the same holds true for Biden. While there are a lot of Democrats and independents who don't approve of Biden, because they hate Trump with the passion of a thousand burning suns, they will make the choice to vote for Biden, despite thinking he's done a pretty crappy job as president.whiterock said:There are several that not only have him ahead in support, but winning independents by a margin greater than the overall margin.sombear said:Show me 2 actual pollsters that have Trump's approvals higher than Biden and I'll at least partially agree . . . .whiterock said:I think at this point we could find a poll to please anyone. All over the map......sombear said:I was not a fan of 538 in the early years, but now it is primarily a poll aggregator.whiterock said:sombear said:whiterock said:🚨 NEW NATIONAL POLL
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) August 22, 2023
PRES:
(R) Trump 43%
(D) Biden 38%
.
(D) Biden 37%
(R) DeSantis 34%
——
GOP PRES:
Trump 60%
DeSantis 16%
Ramaswamy 6%
Pence 4%
Scott 3%
Haley 3%
Christie 1%
.
H2H:
Trump 67%
DeSantis 26%@premisedata | 08/17-21 | RVshttps://t.co/wTV05DnFpF
This is a sham poll. Among other things, it has Trump almost even among Blacks and dominating young voters. No other polls have had anything close to that.
Outlier for sure. Posted mostly because neither 538 nor CBS has ever been Trump friendly. And some here see 538 in particular as reputable. And I think they beat the RCP average in the midterms, IIRC. So we can't ash-can it. It has to sit on the table to review and force questions about what is going on.
Unrelated to 538, 3 polls out showing Biden up on Trump 3-6 points. Two new Biden approval polls, 47 and 43. And generic ballot Dem 45 GOP 42. No bueno.
I'm not contesting that "approvals" matter, just noting that "approval rate" is not synonymous with "who do you intend to vote for." That is particularly true given the "margin of error" separation between the two guys in almost every poll, regardless of who's on top or bottom.
We will indeed have people making the eminently rational choice to vote for Trump despite thinking Biden is a nicer guy.
I don't necessarily disagree on the RICO charges, but this same prosecutor has used the squishy RICO statute to obtain guilty convictions on pretty flimsy charges under RICO. And therein lies the problem - RICO is so squishy, it's a real danger to Trump, especially in front of a jury comprised mostly of Democrats. He should be very concerned about that one.whiterock said:The RICO stuff is a pile of wild-ass allegations turning every political campaign strategy session into a criminal enterprise.....it's an office-holder abusing power to indict an opponent on allegations that completely legal activity is somehow a criminal conspiracy because the office-holder doesn't like it. The whole thing, office holder and charges, are a dire threat to the First Amendment liberties of half the country.OsoCoreyell said:That would be great if it were true. Unfortunately, it's not even close to true.whiterock said:Mothra said:Ordinary Joe in IA is most likely not voting for Trump, just FYI. And while I agree with you that to some extent Trump has been unfairly persecuted, he also shoulders much of the blame for bringing this on himself and making himself a very easy target. The idea that Dems will go after those other than Trump who don't engage in his tired antics simply isn't supported by the evidence to date. Time will tell if you are right, but the idea that they'll just prosecute someone else if it's not Trump is not a conclusion supported by any evidence.whiterock said:One need not be a philosopher savant to understand that, for all his flaws, he has been wildly unfairly persecuted by opponents who claim moral high ground while abusing their offices, thereby proving they are an even bigger problem than he is. If they will do that to him, they will do that to anyone who opposes them. They will always find a reason to justify doing it to anyone who disagrees with their worldview.....social justice, climate justice, just-because justice.....sombear said:
Amazing, yet consistent with my earlier post. This is from the preeminent Iowa pollster:
A quirk in timing gave the pollsters a unique look at Republican reaction to Trump's indictments. As it happened, the polling began on Aug. 13 and lasted until Aug. 17. And then, as it happened, on Aug. 14, with the polling underway, Trump was indicted in Georgia. The timing of it gave the pollsters an unexpected look, in real time, at Republican reaction to a Trump indictment. As it turned out, they saw Trump's support increase before their very eyes.
"Before the announcement [of the Georgia indictment], when about one-third of the Iowa Poll respondents had been interviewed, Trump was named as a first choice, second choice, or candidate being 'actively considered' by 55% of those polled," the Des Moines Register reported. "Among those polled after the Georgia indictment about two-thirds of the total respondents that climbed to 67%."
Pollster Ann Selzer, a veteran of many Iowa polls, told the Des Moines Register, "This is the strongest evidence I've seen to date that these indictments, or at least this Georgia indictment, helped him."
Ordinary Joe in IA is showing far more emotional maturity than the neverTrump caucus.
The problem with your last point there is that the charges against him are not supported by any evidence, either.
The documents charge is almost as bad, but I will allow there is more substance in that there does appear to be documents in the wrong place. But Trump will argue an affirmative defense and given the venue of the trial has a good chance of success.
Do you really think the courts are going to allow all this to come to trial before the election?
I'm skeptical.
Not that a conviction will matter much, or at least change any minds.
RD2WINAGNBEAR86 said:
Do you honestly think the Democrats will be allowed to push aside Kamala and risk burning the country down? No way. They bring in the Cafeteria Czar. Michelle Obama hates our country more than Biden.