Joe Biden is winning both new voters and vote-switchers đ August 2, 2020
2016 Trump voters are about three times likelier than Clinton voters to switch to the other side
If youâre newly worried about your mail-in ballots being counted, I bet you had never entrusted the postal service with an expensive package. And this is my weekly newsletter.
Iâm G. Elliott Morris, a data journalist and political analyst who mostly covers polls, elections, and political science. As always, I invite you to drop me a line (or just respond to this email). Please hit the â¤ď¸ below the title if you like what youâre reading; itâs our little trick to sway Substackâs curation algorithm. If you want more content, I publish subscriber-only posts 1-2x a week.
Dear reader,
There are 93 days until election day. Oh, how time flies. As the horse-race begins to suck up more and more of our attention about what might happen, it will be harder and harder to force ourselves to consider the why behind it. Letâs try to start things off with a simple but important topic shaping the contours of 2020: partisan loyalty.
âElliott
Joe Biden is winning both new voters and vote-switchers
2016 Trump voters are about three times likelier than Clinton voters to switch to the other side
CBS News and YouGov released two new polls today, one each in Georgia and North Carolina. The toplines numbers are a bit rosier for Joe Biden than the averagesâhe leads Donald Trump by 1 and 4 points, respectivelyâbut the more important stuff is under the hood.
One thing that makes polls from YouGov extremely useful is that they asked many of their online panelists who they voted for shortly after the 2016 election. The idea is that asking them shortly after the contest will minimize bias in vote recall; some past research suggested that people are less likely to admit voting for the loser, though thatâs no longer clearly the case.
This enables some more-accurate-than-usual comparisons of how people voted in 2016 and how they say theyâll vote now. In the case of the CBS data in Georgia and North Carolina, we get some stunning data on how likely Trump and Clintonâs 2016 voters are to vote for the same partyâs candidates this time around. They find that 2% of Hillary Clintonâs 2016 voters say theyâre going to vote for Donald Trump this November, whereas 6% of Trumpâs 2016 voters say theyâre going to cast ballots for Joe Biden. (Wonky note: Although these differences are technically within the normal margin of sampling error, the interval is smaller when percentages are closer to 0âmaking the differences more likely to be accurateâand also match a lot of other polls.)

The finding that Trump voters are three times as likely as Clinton voters to say theyâre switching parties this time is a huge deal. Although the percentages sound small (4 points is not that large), in our modern age of close elections small changes can make huge differences. Weâre talking about a delta of 2.3 million votes nationwide for Biden, just from vote-switching alone.
Perhaps even starker a finding is that new voters in Georgia are 20 percentage pointsâor 66%âlikelier to say theyâre voting for Biden than Trump. The directional differences here arenât too newsworthy (weâve known for a while that non-voters lean toward Democrats, particularly in the sunbelt) but the magnitude of the disparity is frankly shocking. I did not expect a 20 point difference.

All of this underscores an overall theme in the election: that Trumpâs problems run deep. Not only does he need to hold on to more than 88% of his backers from 2016 if he wants to winâhe only barely won the electoral college, and with a minority of the popular voteâbut if heâs going to lose them, then heâs going to need to find voters from somewhere else. If Trump is also losing new voters with 30% of the vote to Bidenâs 50%, heâs running out of options.
Posts for subscribers
August 1: Has the Midwest drifted back toward the Democrats? A quick look at the polls suggests... maybe?
What I'm Reading and Working On
Iâve ordered a copy of Anne Applebaumâs new book Twilight of Democracy: The Seductive Lure of Authoritarianism and am really looking forward to reading it. Well, I guess âlooking forwardâ mike evoke too much positivity for so dreary a subject. But you get the point.
Thanks for reading!
Thanks for reading. Iâll be back in your inbox next Sunday. In the meantime, follow me online or reach out via email if youâd like to engage. Iâd really love to hear from you.
If you want more content, I publish subscriber-only posts on Substack 1-3 times each week. Sign up today for $5/month (or $50/year) by clicking on the following button. Even if you don't want the extra posts, the funds go toward supporting the time spent writing this free, weekly letter. Your support makes this all possible!
Photo contest
Thanks for all the entries last week. Jacob sent in a photo of Maui that I enjoyed. Send in a photo of your pets for next week to elliott@gelliottmorris.com.
