Saturday, June 22, 2019

Warren Builds On Renewed Momentum While Biden Holds Steady



WEEKLY SNAPSHOT

With five new national polls out this week and nine new state polls (including three from Florida alone), the reports that Elizabeth Warren is making a comeback in the race for the Democratic nomination is backed up by the polling. And it appears that she is drawing her renewed support at the expense of Bernie Sanders, as front-runner Joe Biden holds steady in spite of some recent gaffes.
The rest of pack remains virtually unchanged, with Buttigieg, Harris, O'Rourke and Booker all holding steady in the polling.


UPDATED NATIONAL RANKINGS

The Top Five


  • Biden -- 31.7 % (Last Week: 31.8 %)
  • Sanders -- 15.9 % (Last Week: 17 %)
  • Warren -- 12.1 % (Last Week: 10.8 %)
  • Buttigieg -- 7.7 % (Last Week: 7.7 %)
  • Harris -- 7.1 % (Last Week: 7.1 %

The Middle of The Pack


  • O'Rourke -- 3.5 % (Last Week: 3.5 %)
  • Booker -- 2.1 % (Last Week: 2.2 %)

Still In The Race

  • Klobucher -- 1.1 % (Last Week: 1.1 %)
  • Yang -- 1.1 % (Last Week: 1 %)
  • Ryan -- 0.8 % (Last Week: 0.8 %)
  • Castro -- 0.7 % (Last Week: 0.6 %)
  • Gabbard -- 0.6 % (Last Week: 0.6 %)
  • Gillibrand -- 0.5 %  (Last Week: 0.5 %)

Outside The Polling

All of the other announced candidates were below 0.5% or did not show in the national polling from this past week.


NEW NATIONAL POLLS 

We have five new national polls since our last update:

YouGov, in a poll of likely voters, has Biden leading Warren 26-14, followed closely by Sanders at 13, then Buttigieg at 9, Harris at 7, O'Rourke at 4, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less.

Monmouth University, in a poll of registered voters, has Biden ahead of Warren 32-15, followed closely by Sanders at 14, then Harris at 8, Buttigieg at 5, O'Rourke at 3, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less.

Morning Consult, in their weekly poll of 17, 226 likely voters, has Biden well in front of Sanders 38-19, followed by Warren at 11, Buttigieg at 9, Harris at 7, O'Rourke at 4, Booker at 3, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less.

HarrisX, in a poll of registered voters, has Biden out front of Sanders 35-13, followed by Warren at 7, O'Rourke at 6, Harris at 5, Buttigieg at 4, Booker at 3, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less.

Suffolk University, in a poll of likely voters, has Biden leading Sanders 30-15, followed by Warren at 10, Buttigieg at 9, Harris at 8, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less.

NEW STATE POLLS

We have a nine new state polls this week, including three from Florida and two from South Carolina, and one each from Iowa, New Hampshire, Texas, and Virginia. You can see all the polls on our State Polling Averages page.


Starting in Florida. the state polling in many ways mirrors the national polling, with Biden holding a near 20-point lead in the Sunshine state. The three polls are from Zogby Interactive/JZ Analytics, Quinnipiac University, and Change Research.

South Carolina, with a pair of polls, shows a growing battle for runner-up in a crucial early primary state, with Sanders and Warren neck-and-neck with each other while Buttigieg and Harris are not far behind. The two most recent polls are from YouGov and Change Research

Over in Iowa, the race is much closer than elsewhere, with Biden just over six points ahead of Sanders, while Buttigieg and Warren are tied for third place, though the most recent poll from YouGov shows Biden and Sanders gaining some separation from the rest of the pack.

Meanwhile in New Hampshire, which had been expected to be a strong state for Sanders, there is much for his campaign to worry about, with both the three-poll average and the latest individual poll from YouGov showing Biden steadily in the lead and Warren coming up quickly.

Virginia echoes the national polling, with Biden well ahead, followed by a close race between Sanders, Warren, and Buttigieg. The most recent poll from Hampton University confirms the only other poll released from the state. 

And then there's Texas, where native son O'Rourke continues to falter in the latest YouGov poll, staying behind Biden while Sanders and Warren are moving up right behind.


THE DEBATES

The first debates of the Democratic primary season kick off this week, and 20 of the 23 Democratic presidential candidates will be divvied up between two nights. 

The candidates will face off on Wednesday and Thursday evening in Miami, with each debate beginning at 9 p.m. ET and scheduled to end at 11 p.m. Moderators will be Lester Holt, Savannah Guthrie, Chuck Todd, Rachel Maddow and José Díaz-Balart. 

USA Today has an excellent primer on who is on each stage, where they will stand, how the moderation will work, and why the bottom three didn't make the cut.

The next debates are scheduled for July 30-31 in Detroit, using the same qualification standards as this week's debates. 

Sunday, June 16, 2019

Biden Slips A Bit, Sanders Flat, Warren Continues To Build


WEEKLY SNAPSHOT


With four new national polls out this week and ten new state polls, the race for the Democratic nomination is far from clear, with a number of candidates moving up on the front runners, while the back of the pack is hoping for a strong debate performance to emerge from their relative national obscurity.


Front-runner Joe Biden continues to slip a bit, dropping about three points over the past two weeks, while Bernie Sanders remains steady in second, and Elizabeth Warren continues to climb, staking out a solid third-place standing with a nearly two point jump.

Pete Buttigieg also continues to rise, leap-frogging Kamala Harris for fourth place, while Beto O'Rourke and Cory Booker languish in the low single digits. 

UPDATED NATIONAL RANKINGS


The Top Five


  • Biden -- 31.8 %
  • Sanders -- 17 %
  • Warren -- 10.8 %
  • Buttigieg -- 7.7 %
  • Harris -- 7.1 %

The Middle of The Pack


  • O'Rourke -- 3.5 %
  • Booker -- 2.1 %

Still In The Race


  • Klobucher -- 1.1 %
  • Yang -- 1 %
  • Ryan -- 0.8 %
  • Castro -- 0.6 %
  • Gabbard -- 0.6 %
  • Hickenlooper -- 0.6 %
  • Gillibrand -- 0.5 % 
  • De Blasio -- 0.4 %

Outside The Polling

All of the other announced candidates were below 0.5% or did not show in the national polling from this past week.

Here's the full graph of all ranked candidates over the past ten national polls:




NEW NATIONAL POLLS 


We have four new national polls since our last update:


YouGov, in a poll of registered voters, has Biden at 26, followed by Warren at 16 (her first time in second place in a national poll since Biden entered the race), Sanders at 12, Buttigieg at 8, Harris at 6, O'Rourke at 3, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less. 

Quinnipiac University, in a poll of registered voters, has Biden at 30, followed by Sanders at 19, Warren at 15, Buttigieg at 8, Harris at 7, O'Rourke at 3, and the rest of the pack at 1% or less.

Change Research, in a poll of likely voters, has Biden at 26, followed by Sanders at 21, Warren at 19, Buttigieg at 14 (his best showing in any national poll), Harris at 8, O'Rourke at 3, and the rest of the pack at 1% or less.

And Morning Consult, in poll of of 17,000 likely voters, has Biden at 37, followed by Sanders at 19, Warren at 11, Buttigieg and Harris as 7, O'Rourke at 4, Booker at 3, and the rest of the pack at 2% or less. 

NEW STATE POLLS


We have a large number of new polls this week, including our first polls from Minnesota, Ohio, and Arizona, along with polls from Nevada, South Carolina, California, Massachusetts, Michigan, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania.  


You can see all the polls on our State Polling Averages page, so instead of listing all ten polls, we're going to cover the highlights here.

In Nevada, Biden increases his lead over Sanders while Warren moves up, which is pretty much the same story in South Carolina (where Biden has an even larger lead). In Michigan and Pennsylvania, Biden has a firm grip on the top spot as well, as he does in our first polls from Ohio and Arizona. 

In California, one of the early primary "grand prize" states, Biden has a small lead over Sanders, with Harris faltering a bit at the expense of a rising Warren.

CALIFORNIA 04/12/19 06/01/19 06/12/19
AVERAGE






Biden 21 30 22
24.3
Sanders 22 23 17
20.7
Harris 17 15 13
15
Warren 8 12 18
12.7
Buttigieg 9 12 10
10.3
O'Rourke 10 3 3
5.3

In Massachusetts, the new poll from the reliable Suffolk University is one of the most surprising polls we've seen in the past few weeks, and quite bad news for Sanders and O'Rourke.

MASSACHUSETTS 11/16/18 04/10/19 06/10/19
AVERAGE






Biden 19 23 22
21.3
Sanders 14 26 6
15.3
Warren 11 14 10
11.7
Buttigieg 0 11 8
6.3
O'Rourke 10 8 1
6.3
Harris 6 7 5
6

Wisconsin is looking more and more like it's going to be a major battleground state, making the candidates work for their share of the state's 77 delegates. 

WISCONSIN 03/18/19 04/20/19 05/30/19
AVERAGE






Biden 24 24 28
25.3
Sanders 39 20 13
24
Warren 14 6 14
11.3
Harris 5 7 7
6.3
Buttigieg 1 10 7
6
O'Rourke 6 5 1
4
Klobucher 4 4 3
3.7
Booker 2 4 2
2.7

And rounding things out, we have our first poll in Minnesota (from the middle-rated Change Research), which shows that Democrats there have a lot in common with their neighbors in Wisconsin, with just five points separating first from fourth. Warren leads at 21, followed by Biden at 20, Sanders at 19, and Klobucher at 16, Buttigieg rounds out the top five at 11. 

THE DEBATES


The Democratic National Committee has finalized the 20 candidates who will take part of the two days of debates in Miami on June 26 and 27, as well as doing a blind draw to select which ten candidates will appear each night.


The first night will feature Cory Booker, Elizabeth Warren, Beto O’Rourke, Amy Klobuchar, John Delaney, Tulsi Gabbard, Julián Castro, Tim Ryan, Bill de Blasio, and Jay Inslee. The second night will feature Kamala Harris, Joe Biden, Bernie Sanders, Pete Buttigieg, Kirsten Gillibrand, Michael Bennet, Marianne Williamson, Eric Swalwell, Andrew Yang, and John Hickenlooper.

And while the DNC all but bent over backwards to randomly select which candidates appeared on which night, it does appear that the second night is more of a "heavyweight" night, although it is generally believed the first night will draw more initial interest.

Both Politico and Vox had their usual "winners and losers" columns, which make for some interesting reading. And for many of you who have emailed or commented in other forums about why there's so much attention being paid to the race this "early", the race for President has been steadily starting earlier and running longer. This is hardly a new trend, and in our opinion, works better for the voting public as it gives us all time to look at each of the candidates that interest us instead of having only a few choices. 

Besides, for political number crunchers like us, it's just plain fun. And less expensive than golf.