sombear said:
Oldbear83 said:
sombear said:
Oldbear83 said:
And by the way, the Daily Mail is not even American.
Not a compelling source, pal.
They were not the source. They reported on the poll.
How about Insider Advantage, a traditionally Trump leaning Pollster, July 31 - August 1: Biden ahead 57-37 among women.
And Economist/You Gov, July 22-25: Biden up 6 in the burbs.
Glad to post many more, but you'll get bored b/c they all show the same thing and are consistent with the internals.
Again, links please. I prefer not to rely on headlines, especially cherry-picked ones.
This is why I posted a variety of polls, including two known for not being pro-Trump.
Sorry, I would if I could. I don't have links. I get the tabs sent to me in PDFs. I'm guessing you can find them on RealClearPolitics or 538.
Considering this is 14+ months before the election,. there's a long way to go.
I continue to hope that Trump's present lead is a result of the court hype, and that the primaries will produce a GOP nominee who will be worthy of our trust.
But I also intend to counter the lies sold by the MSM about what will happen in 2024. Checking the details in polls against the same polls in the time relative to 2016 and 2020.
There's no end of people selling opinion, and if you look long enough you can find a poll somewhere which says what you want to hear. That's why the demographic details matter.
Suburban women, for example, is not so precise a term as you may think. CBS included metro Chicago as 'suburban' in 2020, and the same for Philadelphia. Siena and the NYT use different standards for that designation, and it gets different with Rasmussen and the HarrisX polls.
For background, I started working with polls in 2000, shortly before I started writing for Polipundit. I learned the different ways pollsters work, such as the fact that university polls oversample young voters because that's who they can more easily reach, while polls with longer histories tend to oversample older voters when the depend on RDD. The jury is still out on mixing media, by the way. A poll which mixes phone results with online results to produce a greater sample size is mixing methodologies, which for a long time was strongly discouraged by stat purists.
My point is that its fun to discuss polls, but a serious analysis has to wait for something closer to the event. "Likely voter" in August a year plus before the election has no real meaning, after all.
That which does not kill me, will try again and get nastier