It may not be that simple. Here's a USA Today/Suffolk poll that has Bloomberg, not Joe Biden, in second place behind Bernie Sanders in California. Here's a CBS/YouGov poll of California with Biden in second place behind Sanders, at 19%, but Elizabeth Warren only 1 point behind Biden. Here's a High Point poll of North Carolina that has Bloomberg second to Sanders, with Biden a distant third. Here's a Dallas Morning News poll of Texas that has Bloomberg in second place behind Sanders. Here's a Data for Progress poll of Texas with Bloomberg and Biden tied for second behind Sanders, and here's a Univision/University of Houston poll of Texas that also has a Biden-Bloomberg tie for second.
I'm cherry-picking these polls, of course, and they were all conducted before Buttigieg, Klobuchar, Beto O'Rourke, and others began to rally around Biden. Nevertheless, I think it's too soon to say that we're in a two-candidate race.
Let's not assume that the votes of the dropout candidates will automatically go to Biden. According to Morning Consult:
* 21% of Buttigieg’s supporters said their second choice was Sen. Bernie Sanders.Sanders could have such a good Super Tuesday that Biden will be seen as unable to catch up. Bloomberg could overachieve. Warren could overachieve.
* 19% picked former Vice President Joe Biden and Sen. Elizabeth Warren, and 17% chose former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.
Or the two-candidate narrative could be accurate:
Here's the shift in the Sanders/Biden margin Data for Progress data from now compared to post-NV: CO +24 S to +14 S, NC: +2 S to +9 B, TX: +9 S to +2 B, VA: +9 S to +15 B (!)... Average shift +14 B... That is NUTS. (1/?)
— (((Harry Enten))) (@ForecasterEnten) March 3, 2020
But I'll wait until I see some results before I fully accept it.
No comments:
Post a Comment