Frank Camp
On Thursday, Fox News released
the results of a poll conducted
on 1,013 registered voters between August 11 - 13. According to the poll, each
one of the top four Democratic presidential candidates would defeat President
Trump in the 2020 election if it were held today.
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Foto: Win McNamee/Getty Images |
·
Joe Biden (50%), Donald Trump (38%)
·
Bernie Sanders (48%), Donald Trump (39%)
·
Kamala Harris (45%), Donald Trump (39%)
·
Elizabeth Warren (46%), Donald Trump (39%)
The survey also asked about
favorability. While all four top Democratic candidates are performing well,
President Trump’s favorability rating is underwater at 42%
"favorable" versus 56% "unfavorable." The only Democratic
candidate whose favorability comes close to negativity is Sen. Kamala Harris'
(D-CA) at 41% "favorable" and 40% "unfavorable."
Since November of 2016, when
Trump's net favorability was -22 in the Fox poll, his ratings have bobbed up
and down, usually moving between the lower to mid-40s.
The survey also asked:
"How satisfied are you with the way things are going in the country today
– are you very satisfied, somewhat satisfied, not very satisfied or not at all
satisfied?" A combined 40% said they are "very" or
"somewhat" satisfied, while a combined 59% said they are "not
very" or "not at all" satisfied.
The Fox News poll isn't the only
one predicting a Trump loss if the election were held today. According to the
RealClearPolitics average, the president would lose to Biden by
approximately 8.6%,
Sanders by 5.6%,
Warren by 3.2%,
Harris by 2.2%,
and South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg by 0.3%.
Despite current polling
numbers indicating a win for the Democrats on November 3, 2020, recent history
tells us that when it comes to Donald Trump, nothing is out of the realm of
possibility.
In the months leading up to
the 2016 general, former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton was consistently
riding above President Trump in every major poll. While there were certainly
outlier firms that appeared to have their finger on the pulse of real American
voters, a vast majority of polling organizations showed Clinton with a lead of
between 2% and 7% in the two weeks prior to the election.
Technically, on a votes-cast,
popular vote basis, the polls were correct. Of the approximately 128.8 million
votes cast for either Hillary Clinton or Donald Trump in the 2016 general
election, 51.1% went to Clinton while 48.8% went to Trump – the difference of
2.3% being nearly identical to the Real Clear Politics polling
average of 2.1%.
It's also wise to remember
that while polls are a useful metric by which we can measure enthusiasm for
political candidates, they should not be taken as gospel, and are merely a
representation of a moment in time. Perhaps more importantly, as it pertains to
this poll in particular, the open nature of the Democratic field may have an
impact on voter excitement that could dampen over time, or as a single
Democratic candidate remains standing to face President Trump in the 2020
general election.
Frank Camp, The Daily Wire, August 16, 2019
A guardar no cofre. Vale
lembrar que a FOX News não se caracteriza, a exemplo de tantas outras estações
de TV, nos EUA e outros países, por uma panfletagem contínua e repetitiva
contra Donald Trump.
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