Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Virginia. Show all posts

Thursday, October 15, 2020

The Electoral College Map (10/15/20)

Update for October 15.


Thursday was another day with a ton of new polling data. There were 22 new surveys from 13 states (and the two congressional districts in Maine) in total. But for all the new numbers, there just were not that many changes to go along with them. It is not that this race is not changing. It is. But it is changing with some measure of subtlety. At this point, the battleground and target states are saturated with polls and despite the fact that older polls are discounted in the FHQ formula, that over-saturation of surveys means that it is difficult to move the needle in any marked way. 

It takes a steady stream of surveys with results noticeably different the average margin (or shares of support) to affect things. Take North Carolina and Pennsylvania as examples. The margin in the Tar Heel state last month was tracking down toward Biden +1.25 but has since reversed course and has today surpassed Biden +1.75. And that is due in part to the recent rush of polls out of North Carolina, many of which have the former vice president ahead by four to five points. Those changes have happened fairly rapidly, but FHQ by design is slow to react (and will likely continue to be slow in changing should any new data continue to reflect the recent reality in North Carolina polling). 

Pennsylvania has followed a similar trajectory, but the changes there have taken place more gradually. Once threatening to jump the Lean/Toss Up line into Toss Up Biden territory, a similar but more spaced out group of polls have nudged the margin in the Keystone state back up to around Biden +5.5 with some signs of plateauing there. 

Other sites may have both of these states a bit further into Biden's column than here at FHQ, but those models are designed to be a bit more responsive to changing polling data. The formula at FHQ is put together a bit differently and the numbers reflect that. There is some general skepticism built in here that may admittedly miss a late break ahead of election day, but operates with the assumption that things ultimately regress to the mean. 

In any event, despite all of the methodological differences, the order of states here is still fairly consistent with what it is at other sites and that is especially true among the battleground and target states. 

But enough of all that. On to the polls... 


Polling Quick Hits:
Arizona
(Biden 49, Trump 47 via Ipsos | Biden 49, Trump 47 via Monmouth | Biden 49, Trump 45 via OH Predictive)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +3.10]
Two of the three new polls showed little to no difference over the previous surveys in the series. The latest from Ipsos in the Grand Canyon state continued to give Biden a two point cushion (although both candidate gained a point since the last poll) and the former vice president had the exact 49-47 lead in the Monmouth poll which broke a 47-47 tie (in the low turnout model) in the September poll. But where there was some significant ostensible narrowing was in the OH Predictive survey. There the Democratic nominee's ten point lead was more than halved. And although that shift will grab the attention, that last poll serves as an outlier among the other surveys in Arizona at the time. This is more regressing to the mean more than it is actual tightening in this race. Biden is consistent across all three poll -- a little above his FHQ average share of support -- and the president is more consistent in the OH Predictive poll than in the other two. But none are far off and all are consistent with where the battle for Arizona's 11 electoral votes has been: slightly tilted in Biden's direction. 


Colorado
(Biden 54, Trump 42 via Civiqs | Biden 54, Trump 39 via Keating Research)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +12.96]
Consistency is also the name of the game in Colorado. Sure, the Centennial state has been surveyed far fewer times than Arizona, but both of these polls point toward a similar conclusion. Keating was last in the field in the state in May and the picture is hardly different now. Biden is still in the mid-50s and Trump in the upper 30s. And the Civiqs survey -- its first in Colorado in calendar 2020 -- does not stray too far from that bottom line. Again, every time a new Colorado survey is released, it is worth pointing out just how foreign such a wide margin is even relative to 2016 (much less any of the other cycles this century). It is a safe state for Democrats this cycle and has been throughout.


Florida
(Biden 50, Trump 47 via Ipsos | Biden 47, Trump 40 via Clearview Research)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +3.37]
Today was another day with a couple of new polls out of the Sunshine state; the third day in a row. FHQ will focus on the Ipsos poll since this was the first Clearview survey of calendar 2020 and had a wider than average margin while it left a large undecided number sitting out there (9 percent) unprompted. In the Ipsos series, however, there were some subtle changes like the Arizona poll from the firm above. Biden tacked on an additional point while Trump gained two of his own. That marginally narrowed the race through the Ipsos lens but brought the latest survey more in line with the graduated weighted average margin in the Sunshine state at FHQ. And the margin has continued to sort of plateau in the three to four point range. There has been some oscillation, but every move toward contraction is met with data that pushes the candidates further apart.


Georgia
(Biden 46, Trump 46)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +0.03] 
Even with yesterday's outlier in the rearview and a new survey from Data for Progress showing the major party candidates knotted at 46, things stayed about where they were a day ago. The Peach state is basically tied -- and has been -- but currently remains tipped in the former vice president's direction by the slimmest of margins. Obviously, a tied poll will do little to change that. And this one look exactly like the last DfP poll in Georgia in mid-September: tied at 46.


Iowa
(Trump 48, Biden 47)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +1.27]
Data for Progress was also back in the field for the first time since September in Iowa. In this instance, however, there was some change on the margins. Trump inched up a point and Biden added another two to bring him to within one of the president. That change also pulled the DfP series in line with the FHQ average margin in the Hawkeye state. The candidates' shares are also now roughly in line with their FHQ averages as well. Iowa is close in the polls on average, but for every one Biden lead there are probably two or three for Trump and that is what continues to keep the president narrowly ahead in the state. 


Maine
(Biden 50, Trump 40)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +13.60]

Maine CD1
(Biden 54, Trump 37)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +23.41]

Maine CD2
(Biden 47, Trump 43)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +1.51]
While the statewide numbers and those in the first congressional district understate Biden's advantage in each, FHQ will once again focus on the data from the second district in this new Pan Atlantic Research survey of the Pine Tree state. This is the first public poll that the firm has conducted in Maine, so there is no natural comparison. But after the latest Critical Insights survey found Trump up eight in the second, Biden's +4 in this survey serves as a bit of a counter. Yet, the race for that single electoral vote in the more rural northern district in Maine remains the jurisdiction closest to the partisan line on the Biden side, but it pushed the margin a little closer to North Carolina's. On the whole, this Pan Atlantic survey is on par with both candidates' shares of support. It find both candidates right in the hearts of their ranges in the second in any event. 


Michigan
(Biden 48, Trump 42)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +7.19]
Thursday was another day with another Michigan poll with Biden ahead in the six to nine point range. The latest (although there is one from Civiqs discussed as part of a wave below) was from RMG Research. And those polls are not doing much to change the outlook in the Great Lakes state. That is particularly true of this survey that falls roughly in line with both candidates' average shares of support at FHQ. One place that it does break from some recent polling in the state is that it finds Biden below 50 percent and at the bottom of his recent range of results there. Still, the status quo was maintained in this one. 


North Carolina
(Biden 51, Trump 46)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +1.79]
FHQ mentioned at the outset today that those polls with Biden four to five points are fueling a push in the margin back in his favor. The Civiqs update in the Tar Heel state added another datapoint to that. But this is an update to a (now) series of polls that found Biden ahead by three back in May among a sample of registered voters in North Carolina. The transition to likely voters now (and time since May) has shifted things in the former vice president's direction. Trump held steady at 46 percent, but Biden jumped up above 50 percent. That 46 percent is in line with Trump's current average level of support in the state, but Biden's 51 percent is out in front of his while being consistent with a marginal rising tide of support for him. There are a few more 47-50s popping up for Biden than the 45-47 range that was the core of the Democratic nominees polling there.


Pennsylvania
(Biden 46, Trump 43)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +5.49]
Yesterday Trafalgar charted out a battle in the Keystone state that was within two points and today it is  Insider Advantage finding Biden up just three. Both have Trump hovering around his average share of support but Biden well below his. Both also have a fairly significant share of respondents that fall into the undecided or other category. It has been those types of polls -- those with an undecided share plus other collectively approaching 10 points -- that have tended to be closer not just in the commonwealth but in other states, both battleground and otherwise, as well. 


South Carolina
(Trump 49, Biden 41 via Siena/NYT Upshot | Trump 52, Biden 43 via Data for Progress)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +6.75]
While the summer saw a host of surveys in the Palmetto state find the race for the state's nine electoral votes in the mid-single digits, the polling has taken a turn in October. Recently polling in South Carolina though sporadic still has begun to show the president out to leads approaching ten points. That includes both surveys released today. The Siena poll is like a lot from the college pollster. It leaves undecideds unprompted which typically means the candidates fall short of their established average shares. That is true in this case. And while the Siena poll lacks a true point of comparison, the Data for Progress survey does not. And that series has shown some real movement since the September poll. Biden held steady at 43 percent, but Trump consolidated support with his share rising by five points as the undecided respondents fell by an equivalent five points. Now, that 52-43 lead for the president helps to stretch the average margin out there but it still has Trump lagging a few points behind his 2016 showing while remaining above 50 percent. Biden may have improved over Clinton's pace from four years ago, then, but that is all for nought given where the president is. Again, South Carolina on the Trump side of the partisan line looks a lot like those Lean Biden states on the other side. 


Virginia
(Biden 55, Trump 42 via Civiqs | Biden 53, Trump 38 via Roanoke College)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +12.30]
Like Colorado above, the polling in Virginia does not look like it has in some past cycles during the 21st century. The Old Dominion is not nearly as competitive as it has been and the polling has continually painted that picture in 2020. Biden is comfortably above 50 percent in the averages in the commonwealth at FHQ and neither of today's two polls diverge from that. The Roanoke polls have consistently fallen in that category in three polls since May. And even though the college pollster has had Biden in the low 50s and now right on his average share of support, they have also repeatedly found Trump in the upper 30s below his average share of support. Regardless, like Colorado, Virginia is seemingly comfortably in Biden's column despite some recent assertions from the Trump campaign.


Wisconsin
(Biden 47, Trump 45)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +6.30]
Another Trafalgar Group poll -- this one from Wisconsin -- does not suffer as acutely from the same drawback discussed above in the Pennsylvania discussion. In this instance, the combined undecided/other share is not as large, but the margin is much closer than some other recent public opinion work in the Badger state. It does, however, find Biden on the low end of his range of recent results as Trump is toward the higher end of his. And one could focus on those issues or point toward the fact that in the Trafalgar series in Wisconsin, little has changed since the firm last conducted a poll there in late September. Trump gained a point and that is it. This is yet another story of consistency.


Civiqs (October Rust Belt Rising wave)

Ohio: Trump +3 (Biden +2, Trump +2 since September round)) [Current FHQ margin: Trump +0.59]
Pennsylvania: Biden +7 (Biden +/-0, Trump +/-0)
Wisconsin: Biden +8 (Biden +2, Trump +1)
Michigan: Biden +9 (Biden -1, Trump +1)

Not to give the last Rust Belt series of polls from Civiqs short shrift, but there was not much movement for either candidate among these four Great Lakes states since September. More importantly, perhaps, the order of the states matches the rank order depicted on the Spectrum below. And while the margin in Ohio may be a bit more in Trump's favor than the average margin here at FHQ, the margins in the other three states are maybe tilted a bit more in the other direction. But they do fall in line with where much of recent polling has been in those three blue wall states that Trump flipped in 2016. 


NOTE: A description of the methodology behind the graduated weighted average of 2020 state-level polling that FHQ uses for these projections can be found here.


The Electoral College Spectrum1
DC-3
VT-3
(6)2
IL-20
(162)
WI-10
(253)
MO-10
(125)
TN-11
(60)
MA-11
(17)
OR-7
(169)
PA-203
(273 | 285)
AK-3
(115)
KY-8
(49)
MD-10
(27)
NJ-14
(183)
NV-6
(279 | 265)
SC -9
(112)
AL-9
(41)
CA-55
(82)
ME-2
(185)
FL-29
(308 | 259)
KS-6
(103)
SD-3
(32)
NY-29
(111)
CO-9
(194)
AZ-11
(319 | 230)
NE CD1-1
MT-3
(97)
ID-4
(29)
HI-4
(115)
VA-13
(207)
NC-15
ME CD2-1
(335 | 219)
NE-2
(93)
AR-6
(25)
DE-3
(118)
NH-4
(211)
GA-16
(351 | 203)
IN-11
(91)
OK-7
(19)
WA-12
(130)
NM-5
(216)
OH-18
(187)
UT-6
(80)
ND-3
(12)
ME CD1-1
CT-7
(138)
MN-10
(226)
IA-6
(169)
MS-6
(74)
WV-5
(9)
RI-4
(142)
NE CD2-1
MI-16
(243)
TX-38
(163)
LA-8
(68)
WY-3
NE CD3-1
(4)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he or she won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Trump won all the states up to and including Pennsylvania (Biden's toss up states plus the Pennsylvania), he would have 285 electoral votes. Trump's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Biden's number is on the left and Trump's is on the right in bold italics.

3 Pennsylvania
 is the state where Biden crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election, the tipping point state. The tipping point cell is shaded in yellow to denote that and the font color is adjusted to attempt to reflect the category in which the state is.

Whereas all that polling a day ago yielded one significant change -- Georgia jumping the partisan line into Biden territory -- today's group held the line. Only South Carolina budged, shifting two cells deeper into the Lean Trump group of states and further away from the Lean/Toss Up line to which it had recently been drawn. No longer does South Carolina seem to be inching toward the Watch List (which remains unchanged from yesterday). But the Palmetto state is in a tightly knit group with Alaska and Missouri. As all of those states have dipped into or flirted with the Toss Up category in 2020, FHQ has said that those three were the states where Biden could tack on some additional electoral votes if the bottom truly dropped out on President Trump. That bottom may or may not drop out between now and election day, but Biden's prospects of adding any electoral votes from this trio of states seems dim. The gap between the last Toss Up Trump state (Texas) and the first Lean Trump state (now Missouri) is nearly five points. That is less a gap and more a chasm. If the bottom drops out on Trump, Biden's advances are likely to end at Texas. But given how consistently Iowa, Ohio and Texas have been tilted in Trump's direction those may even be tough tasks for the Biden campaign. Within range, but difficult flips. 

19 days to go.


Where things stood at FHQ on October 15 (or close to it) in...
2016
2012
2008


--
NOTE: Distinctions are made between states based on how much they favor one candidate or another. States with a margin greater than 10 percent between Biden and Trump are "Strong" states. Those with a margin of 5 to 10 percent "Lean" toward one of the two (presumptive) nominees. Finally, states with a spread in the graduated weighted averages of both the candidates' shares of polling support less than 5 percent are "Toss Up" states. The darker a state is shaded in any of the figures here, the more strongly it is aligned with one of the candidates. Not all states along or near the boundaries between categories are close to pushing over into a neighboring group. Those most likely to switch -- those within a percentage point of the various lines of demarcation -- are included on the Watch List below.

The Watch List1
State
Potential Switch
Georgia
from Toss Up Biden
to Toss Up Trump
New Hampshire
from Strong Biden
to Lean Biden
New Mexico
from Strong Biden
to Lean Biden
Ohio
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Pennsylvania
from Lean Biden
to Toss Up Biden
1 Graduated weighted average margin within a fraction of a point of changing categories.

--
Methodological Note: In past years, FHQ has tried some different ways of dealing with states with no polls or just one poll in the early rounds of these projections. It does help that the least polled states are often the least competitive. The only shortcoming is that those states may be a little off in the order in the Spectrum. In earlier cycles, a simple average of the state's three previous cycles has been used. But in 2016, FHQ strayed from that and constructed an average swing from 2012 to 2016 that was applied to states. That method, however, did little to prevent anomalies like the Kansas poll that had Clinton ahead from biasing the averages. In 2016, the early average swing in the aggregate was  too small to make much difference anyway. For 2020, FHQ has utilized an average swing among states that were around a little polled state in the rank ordering on election day in 2016. If there is just one poll in Delaware in 2020, for example, then maybe it is reasonable to account for what the comparatively greater amount of polling tells us about the changes in Connecticut, New Jersey and New Mexico. Or perhaps the polling in Iowa, Mississippi and South Carolina so far tells us a bit about what may be happening in Alaska where no public polling has been released. That will hopefully work a bit better than the overall average that may end up a bit more muted.


--
Related posts:




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Thursday, September 24, 2020

The Electoral College Map (9/24/20)

Update for September 24.


FHQ has said this a number of times this week, but there was a lot to look at today on the polling front: 19 surveys from 12 states. It was a mixture of the six core battleground states (sans Florida), the four Trump toss up states, and then a handful of states that are further out on the ends of the Spectrum that help to calibrate the average swing FHQ has been keeping tabs on from election day 2016 to 2020 general election polling. Currently sitting at Democrats +7.40, that average swing has ticked down a few notches in recent weeks. Once it was approaching eight points, but it topped out and has been receding some since Biden's summer surge that has subsequently regressed to the springtime mean. But that is another way -- the trajectory of average swing across states -- to measure narrowing in this race. So far, it suggests some tightening but not a whole lot.

On to the polls...


Polling Quick Hits:
Arizona
(Biden 49, Trump 47)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +3.47]
Data Orbital was last in the field in Arizona in June and little has changed. Biden continues to claim a two point advantage, but both candidates have peeled off some support from undecided/other in those three months. And that is not unexpected as election day nears. However, this survey does overstate both candidates' support relative to their established averages here at FHQ. That, too, should be expected on some level as election day grows closer.


Georgia
(Trump 45, Biden 45 via Siena/NYT Upshot | Trump 46, Biden 46 via Data for Progress)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +0.40]
Over in the Peach state, both Siena and Data for Progress were in the field there for the first time in calendar 2020. And both found a tied race. That is now three poll releases over the last three days to have the race for the Georgia's 16 electoral votes knotted at somewhere in the mid-40s. The average margin continues to reflect that. FHQ now has basically tied at 46.


Iowa
(Biden 45, Trump 42 via Siena/NYT Upshot | Trump 49, Biden 46 via Monmouth)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +0.36]
The polling in Iowa may be a bit more variable overall, but the bottom line is the same as it is in Georgia. Trump retains a slim advantage but it is tempered by the fact that the Siena and Monmouth polls released today showed three point leads. But it was one for each candidate. Biden was the more consistent of the two across both surveys, but even averaging the two polls comes out to a tie at 46 (rounded), which is in line with where the FHQ weighted averages currently have the contest in Iowa.


Kansas
(Trump 49, Biden 45)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +7.36]
The aim at Data for Progress may have been to survey the Senate landscape in the four states covered today, but it is a bonus to get the presidential numbers in typically reliably red states like Kansas (and Kentucky below). Again that helps to better calibrate the extent of the swing from 2016 to 2020. This poll represents the closest the race has appeared in the Sunflower state's limited polling in 2020 and also Biden's peak there. With this survey incorporated, Biden is overperforming Clinton by a little more than six points while Trump is lagging an almost equivalent amount behind his 2016 pace in Kansas. However, this survey is more consistent with the FHQ average on Trump's share than Biden's. The former vice president is running about three points ahead of his average. Kansas will stay red in 2020, but it has drawn closer in the last four years, only the gap has closer at a rate greater than the average swing.


Kentucky
(Trump 56, Biden 38)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +17.21]
The other deep red state poll from Data for Progress was conducted in Kentucky. There really were not any surprises here. Yes, the swing toward the Democrats from 2016 to 2020 is above average and nearly the same 12 points, but this survey is much more in line with the established average at FHQ: 55-38, Trump. No poll that on target is going to have much of an impact on the average. And this one did not.


Michigan
(Trump 47, Biden 46 via Trafalgar Group | Biden 51, Trump 45 via YouGov | Biden 50, Trump 44 via Data for Progress)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +7.23]
One of these Michigan polls released today does not look like the others. One of these polls is more divergent from the established average margin there than the others. And it is not that Trafalgar missed on one candidate's share and was consistent on the other. It had Trump five points ahead of his average and Biden three points behind his. But then again, this poll is in line with the two other Trafalgar polls in Michigan. The story there is stability even if that series strays from where other pollsters have the race there. Both candidates were above their average shares in the Great Lakes state in the other two polls, but again, one should expect that as election day approaches and undecideds come off the board. But Biden gained more than Trump did -- twice as much -- in the YouGov poll over the firm's last collaboration with the University of Wisconsin at the beginning of August.


Ohio
(Biden 48, Trump 47)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +0.26]
The same change that marked the story in the Michigan series from YouGov above is true of the latest Quinnipiac survey of Ohio. Biden continued to cling to a one point edge -- just as was the case in June Q-poll -- but both candidates saw their share of support modestly increase over the last three months. As is the case in both Georgia and Iowa, FHQ has the battle for the 18 electoral votes in the Buckeye state tied at 46. So this poll has both out in front of their average share but Biden by marginally more. The bottom line in Ohio is that it is close, representing a nearly eight point swing from 2016. And again, if the discussion about which states are the most competitive on election day includes Ohio, then Biden is in reasonably good shape unless the overall swing is not uniform everywhere.


Oklahoma
(Trump 55, Biden 33)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +22.11]
What can one say about the situation in Oklahoma? Well, it remains comfortably red for the president. Furthermore, the margin in the Amber Integrated survey is consistent with the FHQ average margin in the Sooner state. Both candidates' support lagged in this poll behind the average share each has in the averages, but neither was by more than two points. This one is par for the course in Oklahoma. It is a safe state for Trump, but one where the swing has been well above average, nearly double it in fact.


Pennsylvania
(Biden 49, Trump 45 via YouGov | Biden 48, Trump 42 via Franklin & Marshall | Biden 50, Trump 45 via CPEC)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +5.08]
The trio of surveys out of the Keystone state today are all not far off of the averages here at FHQ, but there are some interesting notes in the two series from Franklin & Marshall and YouGov. The former has seen Biden's share tick down each month over the last three months, but Trump has remained stationary. And that is not the sort of trajectory that changes things around here all that much. It counters any notion of a narrowing race in Pennsylvania. But the YouGov trend line is different. Unlike the change across the YouGov series in Michigan, Biden lost some ground, but Trump gained, closing the gap, but not to a point as close as the one point Biden lead in the first poll in the sequence in February. This, then, is not a case of regressing to the springtime mean, not completely anyway.


Texas
(Trump 46, Biden 43 via Siena/NYT Upshot | Trump 50, Biden 45 via Quinnipiac)
[Current FHQ margin: Trump +1.19]
In the Lone Star state, Siena was in the field for their first poll of the season and found Trump up by a handful of points. Compared to the established averages there, both candidates run behind them in this survey, but Biden more than the president. But the Trump number is more in line with his range in recent polls. Biden's is not, and it is attributable to the more inflated undecided/other shares in this survey. Quinnipiac, on the other hand has now conducted three surveys in Texas in calendar 2020, but this is the first with a likely voter screen. Whereas the earlier registered polls showed a one point lead in one direction or the other, the transition to a likely voter sample has benefited Trump, pushing the president to 50 percent while Biden hovered around where he has been in the previous surveys. Texas remains close, but these polls pushed it off the Watch List below.


Virginia
(Biden 48, Trump 43)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +10.61]
The Christopher Newport surveys of Virginia in 2016 were all over the place, sometimes showing Clinton way up, but almost always with other candidates -- those not from either of the two major parties -- pulling in a hefty level of support that did not materialize on election day. That is not exactly the case with the first of the university's polls in 2020, but this one does stand out from all of the other surveys conducted in the commonwealth this year. And it is all about the margin. No poll of the Old Dominion has had Biden up by anything less than double digits since February. No poll has had Trump as high as 43 all year. And it has been since February that Biden has been below 50 percent in a Virginia poll. The tide may be turning there, or it could be that this poll is an outlier.


Wisconsin
(Biden 50, Trump 46)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +6.41]
Finally, the last of the blue wall YouGov polls in Wisconsin represents the latest in a series but also a transition from registered to likely voters. The two point Biden lead in February grew to six points in August, but has contracted in the month since with the switch to a likely voter screen. Both candidates gained in that time, but what Trump added was three times that of Biden's gain. But compared to other recent likely voter surveys of the Badger state, this one has Trump well ahead of where he has been elsewhere (and about three points ahead of his FHQ average). Biden crests above his average share as well, but only by a fraction of a point.


NOTE: A description of the methodology behind the graduated weighted average of 2020 state-level polling that FHQ uses for these projections can be found here.


The Electoral College Spectrum1
DC-3
MA-11
(14)2
CT-7
(162)
WI-10
(253)
AK-3
(125)
AL-9
(60)
HI-4
(18)
NJ-14
(176)
PA-203
(273 | 285)
SC-9
(122)
IN-11
(51)
CA-55
(73)
OR-7
(183)
NV-6
(279 | 265)
MO-10
(113)
UT-6
(40)
VT-3
(76)
NM-5
(188)
AZ-11
(290 | 259)
KS-6
(103)
KY-8
(34)
NY-29
(105)
ME-2
(190)
FL-29
ME CD2-1
(320 | 248)
MT-3
NE CD1-1
(97)
ID-4
(26)
WA-12
(117)
CO-9
(199)
NC-15
(335 | 218)
LA-8
(93)
ND-3
(22)
MD-10
ME CD1-1
(128)
VA-13
(212)
OH-18
(203)
MS-6
(85)
SD-3
(19)
IL-20
(148)
MN-10
(222)
IA-6
(185)
AR-6
(79)
OK-7
(16)
RI-4
(152)
MI-16
(238)
GA-16
(179)
NE-2
(73)
WV-5
(9)
DE-3
(155)
NE CD2-1
NH-4
(243)
TX-38
(163)
TN-11
(71)
WY-3
NE CD3-1
(4)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he or she won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Trump won all the states up to and including Pennsylvania (Biden's toss up states plus the Pennsylvania), he would have 285 electoral votes. Trump's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Biden's number is on the left and Trump's is on the right in bold italics.

3 Pennsylvania
 is the state where Biden crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election, the tipping point state. The tipping point cell is shaded in yellow to denote that and the font color is adjusted to attempt to reflect the category in which the state is.

Again, there was a lot to look at today and a fair number of changes to boot. No, none of those changes were to the colors any states affected are shaded on the map, but there was more shuffling on the Electoral College Spectrum and a couple of changes to the Watch List. Take the latter first. Texas moved off the list but only barely while Virginia on the weight of that outlier CNU poll pushed under the Biden +11 mark and thus inched within a fraction of a point of the 10 point line separating the Strong and Lean Biden categories.

Working from left to right on the Spectrum, Colorado and Virginia swapped spots with Virginia moving closer to the partisan line. Wisconsin moved back to the most competitive middle column, trading spots again with New Hampshire. One should also get used to constant shuffling among the three states that are Trump's first line of defense up against the partisan line. Georgia, Iowa and Ohio are just that close to one another. Today, Georgia and Iowa switched places and it was the Hawkeye state that shifted closer to the partisan line. Finally, the new poll of Kansas -- the smallest margin there are year -- moved the Sunflower state past Montana toward the partisan line separating the Trump states from Biden states. Overall, however, Pennsylvania remained in the middle of it all, the tipping point state five points out of Trump's grasp at the moment.



Where things stood at FHQ on September 24 (or close to it) in...
2016
2012
2008



--
NOTE: Distinctions are made between states based on how much they favor one candidate or another. States with a margin greater than 10 percent between Biden and Trump are "Strong" states. Those with a margin of 5 to 10 percent "Lean" toward one of the two (presumptive) nominees. Finally, states with a spread in the graduated weighted averages of both the candidates' shares of polling support less than 5 percent are "Toss Up" states. The darker a state is shaded in any of the figures here, the more strongly it is aligned with one of the candidates. Not all states along or near the boundaries between categories are close to pushing over into a neighboring group. Those most likely to switch -- those within a percentage point of the various lines of demarcation -- are included on the Watch List below.

The Watch List1
State
Potential Switch
Arkansas
from Strong Trump
to Lean Trump
Georgia
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Iowa
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Louisiana
from Lean Trump
to Strong Trump
Mississippi
from Strong Trump
to Lean Trump
Nevada
from Toss Up Biden
to Lean Biden
Ohio
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Pennsylvania
from Lean Biden
to Toss Up Biden
South Carolina
from Lean Trump
to Toss Up Trump
Virginia
from Strong Biden
to Lean Biden
1 Graduated weighted average margin within a fraction of a point of changing categories.

--
Methodological Note: In past years, FHQ has tried some different ways of dealing with states with no polls or just one poll in the early rounds of these projections. It does help that the least polled states are often the least competitive. The only shortcoming is that those states may be a little off in the order in the Spectrum. In earlier cycles, a simple average of the state's three previous cycles has been used. But in 2016, FHQ strayed from that and constructed an average swing from 2012 to 2016 that was applied to states. That method, however, did little to prevent anomalies like the Kansas poll that had Clinton ahead from biasing the averages. In 2016, the early average swing in the aggregate was  too small to make much difference anyway. For 2020, FHQ has utilized an average swing among states that were around a little polled state in the rank ordering on election day in 2016. If there is just one poll in Delaware in 2020, for example, then maybe it is reasonable to account for what the comparatively greater amount of polling tells us about the changes in Connecticut, New Jersey and New Mexico. Or perhaps the polling in Iowa, Mississippi and South Carolina so far tells us a bit about what may be happening in Alaska where no public polling has been released. That will hopefully work a bit better than the overall average that may end up a bit more muted.


--
Related posts:
The Electoral College Map (9/23/20)

The Electoral College Map (9/22/20)

The Electoral College Map (9/21/20)


Follow FHQ on TwitterInstagram and Facebook or subscribe by Email.

Tuesday, September 15, 2020

The Electoral College Map (9/15/20)

Update for September 15.


The race for the White House is now halfway through September and there are just seven weeks until election day on November 3. This Tuesday -- seven weeks out -- brought seven new polls from four states, all of which have been competitive in the 21st century. But one -- Virginia -- has slipped over the course of those twenty years from a reliably red state to something that appears to be fairly comfortably blue now.

But what is interesting about this group of polls and the first half of September is how little has really changed on the surface. The month began with Ohio pushing over the partisan line in Toss Up Trump territory, but that projected 335-203 Biden advantage in the Electoral College has held since then. But again, that is on the surface. Underneath, there has been some narrowing in a handful of states. Notably, Arizona and Florida have drawn closer, but the latter is closing at a quicker clip as the two are seemingly on a trajectory to converge in the Biden +3-4 point range if the course remains on the same path. North Carolina, too, has tracked down some in the Biden +1-2 point range. Yet, none of those states are essential to the former vice president reaching 270 electoral votes as the Electoral College Spectrum below clearly demonstrates. Even in those states, Trump has work to do. Biden sits at 48 in Arizona, 49 in Florida and 47 in North Carolina in the averages here at FHQ. Trump, then, in states the president will need to get to 270, will need to either bring Biden down some and/or out-perform the former vice president among undecideds (or persuade a lot more Trump supporters to turn out). Obviously, nothing is set in stone, but with just 49 days left -- and voters already voting -- time is running out.


Polling Quick Hits:
Florida
(Biden 50, Trump 50 via Florida Atlantic | Biden 49, Trump 46 via Monmouth)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +3.89]
There were a pair of polls out of the Sunshine state on Tuesday and both show a close race for those 29 electoral votes. The tie in the Florida Atlantic poll is pretty much par for the course in the series of four polls now in 2020. And yes, this series also fits the now familiar pattern. The early polls in January and March showed a nearly tied race both times. But in May, Biden jumped out to a six point lead. While that edge was a little early for the Biden surge in June/July, that was the last poll in a series that is now back to tied. Ride the roller coaster if one must, but recognize also that there is in battleground state after battleground state a pattern of surge and decline in these state-level polls. Things are right back to where they were in the spring: Biden ahead, and by smaller margins than over the summer, but ahead where it will count the most in November.

The Monmouth poll is the university's first survey of the Sunshine state, so there is no direct comparison. However, FHQ will note that our policy has been to take the "low turnout" version of the polls for the sake of continuity. Even if one trades out the low for high turnout version (50-45, Biden), the former vice president's lead only grows by 0.05 points. Either one one looks at, they are both within the ranges in which both candidates have been in Florida polling in September so far.


North Carolina
(Biden 47, Trump 47 via Survey USA | Trump 48, Biden 46 via Trafalgar Group | Biden 49, Trump 46 via CNN)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +1.48]
The trio of surveys recently in the field in the Tar Heel state ran the gamut of results in September polls there. Everyone had something to latch on to. Trafalgar had the president ahead, Survey USA found a tied race and CNN had Biden marginally in front. It was the first poll for each of Trafalgar and CNN, so the focus will be on the series from Survey USA. There have been three Survey USA polls conducted in North Carolina in calendar 2020, but this latest is the first since April. Both of the earlier polls had the former vice president up by four or five. And while there was no data in the intervening period in which Biden would have typically jumped out to a larger advantage, this latest poll breaks with the pattern mentioned above. Biden may have peaked in a hypothetical June Survey USA poll of the state, but even if he had, then that lead would have decayed more than to the (winter and) spring levels. This poll, then, reflects more than that which is something of a silver lining for Trump in a state the president needs.


Virginia
(Biden 53, Trump 39)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +11.71]
The latest survey in the field from Virginia Commonwealth of the Old Dominion shows what most polls there this year have found: Virginia is not a swing/battleground state in 2020. And this VCU series of polls has been pretty consistent through the year. Biden has mostly been at or above 50 percent there while Trump has instead hovered around 40 percent. And that is basically where the FHQ averages are for both candidates right now, Biden 51-40 (rounded).


Wisconsin
(Biden 52, Trump 42)
[Current FHQ margin: Biden +6.37]
Finally, the CNN survey of Wisconsin -- also its first in the Badger state -- catches the eye if only because of that double digit lead Biden carries in a state Trump won by a fraction of a point in 2016. But the surprising thing perhaps about Wisconsin polling right now is not this CNN poll but rather that it is not out of the ordinary for recent polling there. Yes, it has Biden on the high side of his range and Trump on the low side of his, but the consistency of these mid- to upper single digit Biden leads in the Badger state is what continues to break with FHQ's expectations. The narrowing just has not really come to Wisconsin like it has in some other battlegrounds. Now, there is still time for that to change, but there have been enough of those sorts of polls cited above to buttress the former vice president's roughly six point lead there.



NOTE: A description of the methodology behind the graduated weighted average of 2020 state-level polling that FHQ uses for these projections can be found here.


The Electoral College Spectrum1
MA-112
(14)
CT-7
(162)
WI-10
(252)
AK-3
(125)
UT-6
(60)
HI-4
(18)
NJ-14
(176)
PA-203
NE CD2-1
(273 | 286)
SC-9
(122)
IN-11
(54)
CA-55
(73)
OR-7
(183)
NV-6
(279 | 265)
MO-10
(113)
KY-8
(43)
VT-3
(76)
NM-5
(188)
FL-29
(308 | 259)
MT-3
(103)
AL-9
(35)
NY-29
(105)
VA-13
(201)
AZ-11
(319 | 230)
KS-6
NE CD1-1
(100)
ID-4
(26)
WA-12
(117)
CO-9
(210)
NC-15
ME CD2-1
(335 | 219)
MS-6
(93)
ND-3
(22)
MD-10
(127)
ME-2
(212)
OH-18
(203)
AR-6
(87)
SD-3
(19)
IL-20
(147)
MN-10
(222)
IA-6
(185)
NE-2
(81)
OK-7
(16)
ME CD1-1
RI-4
(152)
MI-16
(238)
GA-16
(179)
LA-8
(79)
WV-5
(9)
DE-3
(155)
NH-4
(242)
TX-38
(163)
TN-11
(71)
WY-3
NE CD3-1
(4)
1 Follow the link for a detailed explanation on how to read the Electoral College Spectrum.

2 The numbers in the parentheses refer to the number of electoral votes a candidate would have if he or she won all the states ranked prior to that state. If, for example, Trump won all the states up to and including Pennsylvania (Biden's toss up states plus the Pennsylvania), he would have 286 electoral votes. Trump's numbers are only totaled through the states he would need in order to get to 270. In those cases, Biden's number is on the left and Trump's is on the right in bold italics.


To keep the figure to 50 cells, Washington, DC and its three electoral votes are included in the beginning total on the Democratic side of the spectrum. The District has historically been the most Democratic state in the Electoral College.

3 Pennsylvania
 is the state where Biden crosses the 270 electoral vote threshold to win the presidential election, the tipping point state. The tipping point cell is shaded in yellow to denote that and the font color is adjusted to attempt to reflect the category in which the state is.

There were some significant additions to the polling dataset at FHQ today in a handful of states that are going to decide the election in November. But it was the state that is most comfortably in Biden's column -- Virginia -- that changed and not Florida, North Carolina or Wisconsin. The VCU pushed the average in the commonwealth up enough to nudge Virginia past both Maine and Colorado on the Spectrum above. But, to be clear, all three are tightly bunched with average margins of 11-12 points at the moment. If that passes for a change -- and it does -- then it is a small one. Meanwhile, the averages in both Florida and North Carolina ticked down but continue to advantage Biden. Wisconsin, on the other hand, saw its FHQ average margin nudge up slightly on the weight of that double digit CNN poll. None of the three battlegrounds moved in the rank order on the Spectrum.

Florida may not have budged in the order above but it finally moved off the Watch List. The Sunshine state is no longer within a fraction of a point of possibly moving into the Lean Biden category. It is just a solid Biden toss up as of now. That trims the List to just nine states and districts and still only three that would potentially alter the overall projected tally at FHQ (all of which are on the cusp of potential moves into the Biden coalition of states).

Halfway through September, however, there was a little bit of good news for both camps, but little change, something that continues to be a feather in the former vice president's cap.



Where things stood at FHQ on September 15 (or close to it) in...
2016
2012
2008



--
NOTE: Distinctions are made between states based on how much they favor one candidate or another. States with a margin greater than 10 percent between Biden and Trump are "Strong" states. Those with a margin of 5 to 10 percent "Lean" toward one of the two (presumptive) nominees. Finally, states with a spread in the graduated weighted averages of both the candidates' shares of polling support less than 5 percent are "Toss Up" states. The darker a state is shaded in any of the figures here, the more strongly it is aligned with one of the candidates. Not all states along or near the boundaries between categories are close to pushing over into a neighboring group. Those most likely to switch -- those within a percentage point of the various lines of demarcation -- are included on the Watch List below.

The Watch List1
State
Potential Switch
Georgia
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Iowa
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Mississippi
from Strong Trump
to Lean Trump
Missouri
from Lean Trump
to Toss Up Trump
Nebraska CD2
from Lean Biden
to Toss Up Biden
Nevada
from Toss Up Biden
to Lean Biden
Ohio
from Toss Up Trump
to Toss Up Biden
Pennsylvania
from Lean Biden
to Toss Up Biden
South Carolina
from Lean Trump
to Toss Up Trump
1 Graduated weighted average margin within a fraction of a point of changing categories.

--
Methodological Note: In past years, FHQ has tried some different ways of dealing with states with no polls or just one poll in the early rounds of these projections. It does help that the least polled states are often the least competitive. The only shortcoming is that those states may be a little off in the order in the Spectrum. In earlier cycles, a simple average of the state's three previous cycles has been used. But in 2016, FHQ strayed from that and constructed an average swing from 2012 to 2016 that was applied to states. That method, however, did little to prevent anomalies like the Kansas poll that had Clinton ahead from biasing the averages. In 2016, the early average swing in the aggregate was  too small to make much difference anyway. For 2020, FHQ has utilized an average swing among states that were around a little polled state in the rank ordering on election day in 2016. If there is just one poll in Delaware in 2020, for example, then maybe it is reasonable to account for what the comparatively greater amount of polling tells us about the changes in Connecticut, New Jersey and New Mexico. Or perhaps the polling in Iowa, Mississippi and South Carolina so far tells us a bit about what may be happening in Alaska where no public polling has been released. That will hopefully work a bit better than the overall average that may end up a bit more muted.


--
Related posts:
The Electoral College Map (9/14/20)

The Electoral College Map (9/13/20)

The Electoral College Map (9/12/20)


Follow FHQ on TwitterInstagram and Facebook or subscribe by Email.