Captn_Ag05 said:
They definitely put it out there intentionally. I was making a joke about them putting confidential at the top of something they pushed out to everyone.
From my experience, campaigns don't typically put out internals unless they are concerned about how polling is looking. So, it is a bit concerning.
I think campaigns release internals depending on what they are trying to push. In this case, it's their usual pollster with quantities polled even shown (this is not something cheap to do in a quality way in a day). Realistically, it's a very good data set (probably would mean a lot more to see it in series but it's all we get) and likely just a look under the hood at their view of the battleground states (very good news).
Again, unless she's up 3-5 nationally, I wouldn't worry about any given swing state poll from a 'questionable' public polling source. The cross tabs are fantastic right now for Trump, pretty much across the board:
From Shipwrecked crew just now on x:
Quote:
This is why data analysts continue to see big problems for Harris in the election and the electoral college -- huge margins in Blue states mask this problem in polling numbers.
From Ruy Texiera's latest column --
The latest New York Times/Siena poll has Harris trailing Trump among working-class (noncollege) voters by 17 points. That's identical to Biden's working-class deficit in the last NYT poll before he dropped out and way worse than Biden's deficit among these voters in 2020a mere 4 points.
More detailed NYT results reveal that Harris, relative to Biden in 2020, is doing 10 points worse among white working-class voters and 18 points worse among nonwhite working-class voters. The latter is despite considerable improvement for Harris among this demographic since Biden dropped out.
[Non-college voters] will be the overwhelming majority of eligible voters (around two-thirds) and, even allowing for turnout patterns, only slightly less dominant among actual voters (around three-fifths). Moreover, in all seven key swing statesArizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsinthe working-class share of the electorate, both as eligible voters and as projected 2024 voters, will be higher than the national average.
Sorry if this one was posted today: