The Daily - 43% vs. 43%: Why Trump and Biden Are Tied in Our New Poll
Episode Date: August 3, 2023With Donald Trump facing charges in three different criminal cases, the biggest questions in American politics are whether that creates an opening for his Republican rivals in the presidential race �...� and whether it disqualifies him in the eyes of general election voters.A new set of Times polls has answers to those questions. It shows the president and the former president still tied among registered voters, each at 43 percent.Nate Cohn, The New York Times’s chief political analyst, talks us through the first Times/Siena polling of the 2024 election cycle.Guest: Nate Cohn, chief political analyst for The New York Times.Background reading: Can the race really be that close?The first Times/Siena poll of the Republican primary shows Trump still commands a seemingly unshakable base of loyal supporters.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today.
Now that Donald Trump has been charged in three different criminal cases,
the biggest question in American politics is whether it creates an opening
for his Republican rivals in the
presidential race or disqualifies him in the eyes of general election voters.
My colleague, Nate Cohn, analyzes a new set of Times polls that answer those questions.
It's Thursday, August 3rd.
All right, let's go.
We're off.
Yay.
Hello again.
Hi, Nate.
Is that what I think it just was?
The sounds I was hearing?
Was that a partner obligingly getting rid of an animal from your apartment so that you could record with the Daily?
That is exactly right.
The things we ask of you all.
The dog was chewing on a treat.
And it occurred to me that there was like a 100% chance that when you all really got down to listening to my audio, you were going to hear the sound in the background or whatever.
I appreciate that. Thank you. So Nate, we wanted to talk to you because the Times just finished a
series of major polls about the state of the 2024 presidential race at a really important juncture
when the Republican primary field is now fully formed and the frontrunner,
Donald Trump, has now been indicted three different times, most recently for his efforts
to overturn the 2020 election. And of course, we have learned from you to say that polls are
not predictive. They are snapshots in time. But that said, let's start with the Times poll of
Republican voters in the Republican presidential primary, which feels very relevant at this very moment.
So top line, what did we find?
Top line, we found Donald Trump doing really well.
He had 54% of Republican primary voters to 17% for Ron DeSantis.
That's a 37-point lead.
Nate, I think the word you're looking for is crushing, not just very well.
I mean, that is a crushing lead.
It is a crushing lead.
It's much larger than the lead that Donald Trump ever had in the last Republican primary.
It's bigger than any of the leads that Hillary Clinton had in 2016 or 2008.
It's the sort of range where Donald Trump is a overwhelming front
runner, at least if we have a big asterisk over all of his legal challenges. Right. Well, that
brings me to the inevitable question. How do we explain a lead that big after midterms in which
candidates backed by Trump did pretty poorly. And after several indictments of him
in the past few months, this kind of a lead, given all that, does not at all feel like an
inevitability. So how does the poll account for it? Well, it accounts for it in one of the most
straightforward and direct ways that a poll can account for it. According to our poll,
Republicans overwhelmingly reject the notion that Donald Trump committed serious federal crimes. And they also believe that Donald Trump is
likelier to beat Joe Biden than his rival Ron DeSantis, even though, as you just mentioned in
the last election, Donald Trump's candidates seem to fare quite poorly while Ron DeSantis did well.
And never mind the fact, of course, that Donald Trump actually did lose to Joe Biden three years
ago. Well, let's drill down to which Republicans you're referring to when you say that
the majority of them think Trump has done nothing wrong and that he's the strongest Republican
nominee to take on a Democrat. And the group that I'm most curious about is the Trump MAGA base,
this reliable group of supporters who seem to never abandon him no matter what.
So what does this poll find about that group of voters in this moment?
Well, the MAGA base doesn't account for all of Trump's support, but it is a lot of it.
The poll finds that the base of MAGA voters is about 37% of all Republicans.
And these are people who said that they had a very favorable view of Donald Trump and said they strongly supported him in the Republican primary.
And look, that's a big group of Republicans.
It's more than one third of the party.
We talk about it a lot, but it's an enormous achievement for Trump.
it's an enormous achievement for Trump. And in our poll, none, that is zero of the respondents in this MAGA category said that Donald Trump has committed serious federal crimes.
Zero.
Zero. Only 2% said that he did, quote, something wrong. So this isn't a case where,
you know, there are loyal Trump supporters that acknowledge his wrongdoing, but still support him anyway because of his views on the issues or because they're loyal to him,
they don't accept the premise that he's done something wrong here. And that obviously goes
a long way to explaining why they continue to support him. Right. Because in their mind,
there's nothing, literally nothing to see here. I mean, it's interesting because I think this
gives us a little bit of a basis in data for what we have kind of assumed of the Trump base, which is that it doesn't view an indictment, any indictment, as any kind of harming factor to Trump.
In some ways, it may instead endear him to them.
Is that right?
It's possible.
We had one question that I think got at this, which is that we asked voters whether they thought Republicans needed to stand with Trump in the face of these allegations,
or whether it was okay if Republicans didn't stand by Trump.
Not even that they needed to be against him, just is it okay to not stand by Trump?
And over 90% of these MAGA voters said that Republicans need to stand by Donald Trump in the face of these allegations.
Now, I should say, we finished this poll before Trump
was indicted for his efforts to overturn the election. But there's not much reason to think
this third indictment will change that view among these voters. And to this point, they have seen
their guy is under attack and want to rally to his defense, not that they see something wrong
on Trump's part and that they should distance themselves from him. Got it. So by my math, given that Trump has 54% of Republican voters
supporting him, and given how big the MAGA base is, there's still 17% of Republicans supporting
him who aren't what you would define as his MAGA base. So who are these 17% and why are they with
Trump, according to the poll, versus one of his
rivals? Well, first, it's just worth saying why we don't think they're part of the MAGA base. And
that's because they either said they don't support Trump strongly when we asked them, or they said
they only have a somewhat favorable view of Trump. So there's clearly something about him that they
don't like too much. In a lot of ways, they're broadly representative of all Republicans. And we didn't really talk very much about the makeup of the MAGA base, but the MAGA base is
very populist. It's blue collar. It's very conservative. This group of voters is more
affluent. It's likelier to say that they're only somewhat conservative, or in some cases,
even call themselves moderates. They still have views that align with the Republican Party as a whole,
but they're not all in one camp.
And by their own account,
they're open to candidates
other than Donald Trump
in the primary campaign.
Now, they're backing Donald Trump
over the alternatives.
So they're not an automatic vote against him.
And in fact, they believe that Donald Trump
is more electable than Ron DeSantis,
and they believe he's a stronger leader than Ron DeSantis. But they do concede that Donald
Trump is not as moral as Ron DeSantis. So there are cracks there that hypothetically
could lead them to support someone else if the circumstances permitted it.
Got it. They are, in theory, movable. And to that point, do we know how this 17% feels about this giant looming question of the president's legal problems, the indictments, the trials, the potential that he might be convicted before the election or at any moment, and the degree to which that's just a vast liability for him?
and the degree to which that's just a vast liability for him.
So even among this group of voters who, you know, again,
they're willing to say that DeSantis may be more moral than Trump,
but they also reject the idea that Trump has committed serious federal crimes.
And they also believe that Republicans ought to stand behind Trump in the face of these allegations.
And I should note, by the way, that many of the persuadable voters
who don't support Donald Trump and, in fact, prefer Ron DeSantis or another Republican candidate,
they also think that most of the voters who are open to Donald Trump don't think that he's done
very much wrong here. And they may in fact, see him as the victim. Fascinating. You know,
there's an information ecosystem that is in play here. Most of these voters are getting their
information from a conservative media landscape, where they're hearing that Donald Trump has been mistreated, the allegations are trumped up, that no one else got charged for doing the same thing, and so on.
And I think we should be open to the idea that if that media environment ever changed, that maybe voters would become more receptive to a different message. But at least in that context, the idea that Ron DeSantis can get up
there and say Donald Trump is a criminal is, you know, maybe it would break the ice or something,
so to speak, on this argument with the Republican base, but it could just as easily backfire.
So if you're Ron DeSantis, the number two in this race, and you and your campaign are looking at
this poll, and we know they're looking at this poll, you have to conclude that there isn't all that much math to play with, right? I mean, where does he pick up voters if 37% are unpersuadable and an additional 17% are deeply inclined to see Trump as not doing anything wrong and stronger? So what issue, what strategy makes any sense for him based on this poll?
So what issue, what strategy makes any sense for him based on this poll?
This is a weird thing to say, Michael, but I mean, I think that if you take all these poll results at face value, it adds up to a comprehensive takedown of the DeSantis theory of this race, the DeSantis theory of how they can win this election.
I don't think there's any good news for him here.
That doesn't mean that there's some other thing he couldn't do to get back in the game.
It's just it's not in these results.
You know, if I were to explain the DeSantis case, I would say it's something like DeSantis is the most electable.
He proved it last November.
DeSantis can actually get things done. He did this huge conservative policy agenda in Florida while Trump couldn't get the wall done and so on.
And then perhaps it's also that DeSantis owned a unique set of powerful issues that appealed to Republicans like coronavirus and the fight against woke.
And I don't think our poll provides any reason to believe that those things are working for him today.
Republican voters, as I mentioned earlier, they think that Donald Trump is likelier to beat Joe Biden than Ron DeSantis, even though Trump lost last time and even though Trump's candidates lost in the midterms. They think Trump is likelier to get things done than Ron DeSantis,
even though Ron DeSantis would seem to have a very impressive set of conservative policy accomplishments.
And whenever we tested the, I'll call them woke issues, like taking on woke businesses or fighting the woke left in schools,
they didn't fare that well.
It's not that Republicans disagreed and
thought that Republicans shouldn't fight these fights over woke. They just thought that other
values and other issues were more important. So the idea that Ron DeSantis could overpower all
of his other problems by talking about this woke issue set doesn't seem to be supported here either.
And we didn't even talk about the coronavirus because that issue which really brought Ron DeSantis to national prominence is
in the rearview mirror at this point. I'm having this image in my head of kind of
Ron DeSantis' weapons as being kind of sticks and stones against this kind of vast castle that is
Donald Trump, and they're just not effective. There's nothing here for him. If they want to
come up with some other set of ideas, I would think that they mostly had to not be in this poll. If the weapon they were hoping
for was in our poll, they need to go back to the armory or something. To finish my not that great
metaphor. I'm doing my best. So that makes me wonder if there's a glimmer of hope in this poll,
any glimmer of hope for any of the other candidates who are even further down in this poll than DeSantis,
your Tim Scotts or your Mike Pence's, for example.
Is there one?
Well, they're polling very low right now, Michael.
I mean, Tim Scott and Mike Pence are at 3% and 2%.
You know, I think that they haven't been tested
on the national stage yet, you know,
because they haven't emerged as major players in this race.
Maybe if they did, it would go a lot better for them than it's gone for Ron DeSantis. But given their extremely limited levels of support, the poll certainly doesn't offer any
cause for them to be hopeful either. And, you know, I think that to your point about Fortress
Trump, you know, a lot of what's going on here is about Trump's strength. It's not about DeSantis'
weakness. Certainly DeSantis' weapons aren't
strong enough to bring down the castle, but it's not obvious to me that the problem is the weapons
as much as the fortress. And Donald Trump is someone who's been at the top of the Republican
Party for the better part of a decade, and Republican voters have rallied around him in
the face of the kind of issues that would ordinarily bring down a candidate. So I don't
see very much cause for anyone else to have hope here either. And if you had to identify what this
fundamental strength of Trump is and how he has found a way to project it so successfully since
you guys started doing this poll, what would you say it is? I think that the strength is
his ability to dominate the Republican field and the national media conversation.
In our poll, we asked voters to tell us whether a word described Trump or DeSantis better.
And Trump's best result on that was strong leader.
69% of Republicans said that described Trump best.
22% said DeSantis.
And I think that gets at the whole thing.
It's very difficult for Ron DeSantis
to look like the guy who can beat Biden
or can get things done
when Donald Trump is the one
who's dominating him on the airwaves
and in the national conversation every day.
And strength and leadership are big advantages
for a presidential candidate to command
by this kind of margin.
And maybe there's something that could happen. You know, certainly the legal allegations
are a very unusual twist that we haven't seen before. But no candidate with this kind of a lead
has gone on to lose a presidential primary with this kind of advantage at this point of the
primary season. And in fact, Donald Trump's lead is basically
twice as large as anyone who's ever gone on to lose at this point in a primary.
Wow.
So he's in a very strong position.
So to close out this poll, for now, it clearly dispels the wishful thinking, if we can call it
that, of those who, within the Republican Party,
want to see Trump defeated.
There are a lot of them.
They're prominent, the never-Trumpers,
who have invested both their time and their money
into the idea that someone can rise up and beat him.
And that, based on this poll, is just not looking likely unless somehow Trump is literally disqualified from running through a criminal conviction before the primary is completed.
That's what it looks like here.
There's not much good news to go off of if you're hoping to defeat Donald Trump without, you know, something from above coming in to shake up the race.
We'll be right back.
So, Nate, the Times did a second poll.
We just talked about the poll of Republican primary voters.
You all simultaneously did a poll of a potential general election in which Trump faces Joe Biden.
And that seems quite plausible based on what you just told us about the Republican primary.
And because Biden doesn't have a very competitive primary.
Is that why you felt comfortable with the second poll having just a head-to-head lineup?
That's exactly right.
And I'd add one more thing, which is that voters know these candidates really well.
I mean, ordinarily talking about the general election 15 months out might be a little ridiculous,
but we've had this election before.
These are not unfamiliar characters.
We've literally had this election before.
not unfamiliar characters.
We've literally had this election before.
So I think it's okay to start talking about this given how likely the matchup seems
and how familiar the public is with the candidates.
Right, and just to be clear,
we do not believe that any of the people
in the Democratic race, like your RFK juniors,
are meaningful challengers to Biden at this moment.
We do not.
We had RFK at something like 13%.
Got it. Okay. So what did this second poll, Trump v. Biden, find?
It found a tie. Biden and Trump at 43% each.
Dead heat. Dead heat.
Which on its face does seem like a surprise for the reason you just mentioned, Nate. Biden faced Trump back in 2020 and won.
And you'd imagine that Trump's weaknesses,
especially his legal problems,
would be amplified in a general election poll
far and above how they would be in a primary poll.
So what does this tie tell us?
What does the poll tell us?
So you're right, Trump is weak.
And that's what the poll finds. While most Republicans may not think Trump committed crimes, a majority of voters do think
he's committed federal crimes. A majority of voters also think that he was a threat to American
democracy after the last presidential election. Majority of voters have an unfavorable view of him.
And he lost the last election, as you know. But Joe Biden also has weaknesses.
A majority of voters don't have a favorable impression of Joe Biden.
A majority of voters think that Joe Biden has not done a good job as president.
And so there's a lot of voters who, when confronted with this Biden versus Trump matchup,
they simply seize up in polling terms, I suppose. 10% of our respondents volunteered
that they simply wouldn't vote
or they would vote for someone else
if Donald Trump and Joe Biden were the candidates.
And those weren't options we listed to them.
Those were options they went out of their way to tell us
when we presented them with a presidential election matchup
that looks increasingly likely.
What you seem to be saying is that President Biden
hasn't found a way to exploit Trump's
weaknesses because he has his own real weaknesses as a candidate.
But let's really explore what those weaknesses are and how they emerge in the poll.
I would put his weaknesses into three buckets.
One is something that could be a problem for any president running for re-election, which
is that voters don't like the state of the economy and they don't think the country is heading in the
right direction. An overwhelming majority of voters still think America is heading off on
the wrong track. And voters don't have a good impression of the economy either. Even though
there's a case that the economy is getting better, 49% of voters in this poll said the economy was
poor to just 2% who said it was excellent. Those perceptions of the economy are much worse than they were in the summer of 2020
at the depth of the COVID recession when businesses were closed and people were staying at home.
Now, voters may not be right about whether the economy is better or worse than it was then.
I'll leave that to the economists to debate.
But what's clear is that Biden is certainly not
getting credit for the improving economy yet, and he may still be blamed for an economy that voters
simply don't think is good at all. The second bucket, I think, is Biden's age. In our poll,
only half of Democrats think Biden should be re-nominated. And half of those Democrats,
in an open-ended question, volunteered that they thought Biden's age
or his mental acuity or his health
were the reason why they thought someone else should be nominated.
These are Democrats who presumably should be giving Biden
the benefit of the doubt on all this stuff.
I just want to zero in on this.
You're saying half of Democratic voters in this general election poll,
voters who in theory should be quite faithful to their party's frontrunner,
they don't think he should be renominated. And when you ask them an open-ended question of why
and put it to them, didn't suggest anything to them. Didn't put anything in their mouth on this.
They volunteer age. I guess we should extrapolate that if Democrats feel that way,
so do independents and Republicans. That's always a good rule of thumb. If one party's base
is upset at something about their party, you can only imagine what the independents and the other
side think about it. So I think this is almost certainly a problem for Biden in some respect.
And I think the question that I have is, could it be the case that Biden's age is such a severe
drag on him that it prevents voters from seeing him as doing an effective job,
even if he is by many sort of quantitative measures like the number of pieces of legislation
he passes or the state of the economy, simply because he seems too feeble to believe he could
really be doing the job well. I think that's a possibility. How much of his problem is in the
second bucket? I don't know, but I think it's above zero. Let's say that. Okay, what's the third Biden weakness? The third issue is a little bit different from the first two, and that's that
Biden is not faring well by traditional Democratic standards among Black and Hispanic voters. Among
all registered voters, Biden only has a 71 to 12 lead among Black voters, and he's only at 41 to 38
among Hispanic voters. Now, these are
small subsamples. Polls will have margin of errors ordinarily, and then when you drill down
onto smaller groups, those margin of errors get even bigger. But we've seen these problems for
Democrats and Joe Biden before. In the midterm election, black turnout was really quite weak,
and the Democratic challenge among Hispanic voters has
sort of been steadily increasing over time. So although these are small samples, they're part
of a story that I think we know is already unfolding. And that is preventing Biden from
maximizing his base of Democratic support and getting his number up above 43.
Right. And I'm thinking if you're a Democrat, there's a little bit of a deja vu feeling here
because that long story you're describing
is part of what really hurt Hillary Clinton
against Donald Trump in 2016,
which was that Black voters
didn't turn out in large numbers for her.
Honestly, I think this is a notch worse than that.
I mean, what we see since 2016
isn't simply a low turnout
among Black and Hispanic voters.
We increasingly see both Democratic turnout declining further and now Republicans beginning to actually make gains.
So it's not just that nonwhite voters seem to be staying home.
It's that some more of the nonwhite voters who are turning out are supporting Donald Trump and other Republican candidates.
And again, this is just one poll, small sample size, caveat, caveat, caveat.
But that is very present here again.
And that is holding back Biden's overall level of support in the poll.
Okay, so that helps us understand Biden's weakness.
And given that at this moment, he's tied with Trump at 43% of the electorate that was polled here.
That leaves us with about 14% of the general election voters who seem up for grabs. So,
what can you tell us about that group of people? Well, the main thing that characterizes this group
is that they don't like either of these candidates. But to be honest, they're not a bad group for Democrats on paper, and they're not a bad
group for Joe Biden on paper. This is a group that's disproportionately young.
It's disproportionately Black and Latino. It's disproportionately Democratic. And maybe most
importantly, it disproportionately supported Joe Biden in the last presidential election.
Now, the fact that they supported Biden last time doesn't mean they'll support him again,
presidential election. Now, the fact that they supported Biden last time doesn't mean they'll support him again, but it suggests that the Democrats and Joe Biden specifically ought to
have an easier time than Donald Trump making gains among this other 14% of the electorate.
So this could ultimately be a decisive group of voters in a general election matchup between Trump
and Biden. It most certainly could be, but they're not undecided in the sense that they don't know
who these people are and will have to make up their minds.
Again, these are people who are sort of recoiling at the thought of having to choose between these two and maybe not even getting to the point where they can tell us the decision that not only they made last time, but that they'll make again.
And, you know, there's also risk, of course, that they really don't vote or vote for someone else in a third party candidate as an expression of that dissatisfaction.
Right.
expression of that dissatisfaction. Right. So a general election featuring these two candidates could very much be about not just who earns the affections of this 14% of voters who would break
a tie, but who this 14% dislikes the least. Yes. And right now, if the election is about who they
dislike the least, it's really good for Joe Biden. I mean, this is a group that's very hostile towards Donald Trump, even if it doesn't love Joe Biden by any stretch. Now, I do want to caution a little
bit on how much upside there is for Joe Biden here. If we take these voters and we assume that
they'll vote in 2024 the same way that they voted in 2020, Joe Biden's lead only grows to two points.
So it's not like there's some landslide around the corner once these 14% of voters make up their minds.
Right. That makes me want to touch on something you just mentioned, which is the possibility of a third-party candidate.
When you take math like a 2% lead or a tie, a decision by a third party to enter this race,
whether it's the Green Party or no labels,
which is thinking of putting up a candidate in this general election,
that could prove extremely important with math this tight.
Yeah, it's not hard to imagine how a minor party candidate
or a series of minor party candidates could attract considerable support.
You know, back in 2016, the minor party candidates got something like 6% of
the vote. The voters are not as negative on Biden or Trump as they were on Clinton and Trump back
in 2016. But there are shades of 2016 here, where the voters at the, you know, near the center of
the electorate really don't like either of these people, which was not true in 2020, where most
voters did have a favorable view of Joe Biden. So Nate, how are you thinking about the rest of this campaign, given the snapshot of the race
that we have just taken with these polls this many months before people start voting?
To me, the biggest takeaway is that it means that all of the events of the last few years,
the Stop the Steal movement, the Supreme Court decision to overturn Roe v. Wade, all these criminal indictments, have not disqualified Donald Trump.
At least not when he's facing a Joe Biden with a 39% approval rating.
And this race is competitive, and at least right now, the Democrats have work cut out ahead of them.
And the events of the last three years haven't brought this race to an early end, as some might have thought. And if you're Joe Biden and you see this poll, and like DeSantis
and his staff, you've seen this poll, what do you do in response to it? I think that if you're the
Biden campaign, that your task is fairly straightforward. Not necessarily to pull off,
but at least to identify. You've got to convince voters the economy is good and hope that the news
continues to be good enough to potentially boost those numbers further. You have to persuade voters that
you're doing a decent job. And they'll probably never persuade people that you're not too old
to be president, but at least persuade them that you're good enough to lead the country.
And then third, you have to remind voters of the reasons they didn't support Donald Trump last time
and why they continue not to like him in our poll, that a majority of voters don't have a favorable view of the guy, think that he's a threat to democracy, and think that he's committed serious crimes.
Whether Biden can execute on that easily is not the same as saying that the path is open, of course, but I think that path is straightforward.
straightforward. On the Trump side of the ledger, I think that it's a little weirder to think about what Trump needs to do in the same sort of term, because the poll doesn't really suggest that he
has an obvious path to like 51% of the vote or something. And I find it hard to believe that
the people who believe he's a criminal or who believe that he's a threat to democracy can be
talked out of that too easily with, you know, the right words on the trail. But what you can do is
continue to keep your path open by
continuing to reinforce Biden's weaknesses. You can say that Hunter Biden and Joe Biden are also
involved in criminal conspiracies. You can continue to appear as a vigorous and energetic
candidate that maybe offers a strong contrast to Joe Biden's age. You can argue that the economy
isn't good and that prices are higher and so on. And that may not be a path to a
majority. Donald Trump has never won a majority. But does it keep a path open to another narrow
victory in these battleground states? Maybe it does. Well, Nate, as always, thank you very much.
Thank you for having me.
We'll be right back. Here's what else you need to know today.
On Wednesday, jurors imposed a sentence of death on the gunman who killed 11 people at a Pittsburgh synagogue in 2018,
a massacre that is considered the deadliest
anti-Semitic attack in U.S. history. The gunman, who repeatedly expressed anti-Semitism in online
postings, did not dispute his guilt during the trial, but his lawyers argued that he should be
spared the death penalty because of a history of psychiatric problems and a troubled childhood,
an argument that the jury rejected.
Today's episode was produced by Ricky Nevetsky, Stella Tan, Claire Tennesketter, and Mary
Wilson.
It was edited by Liz O'Balen and Paige Cowett, contains original music by Mary Lozano and Alicia Baitu,
and was engineered by Chris Wood.
Our theme music is by Jim Brunberg and Ben Landsberg of Wonderly.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.