As usual, sorry about the formatting. Best to get to the article, if you can.
Vinny
https://www.wsj.com/articles/what-polli ... ?mod=e2twp
What Polling Can Tell Us 100 Days From the Election
Joe Biden has maintained steady lead over President Trump, but will it hold up?
Biden’s lead over Trump has been
unusually large and stable
Size of lead,
pct. pts.
15
10
5
DEM.
REP.
300
days before the election
200
100
2020
2016
2012
2008
2004
2000
1996
1992
Note: Moving average of polls, based on share of the two-party vote
Sources: Real Clear Politics; Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University, and Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin
By
July 26, 2020 9:00 am ET
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The 2020 presidential election marks an important milestone Sunday as the race enters its final 100 days. Against the backdrop of the coronavirus pandemic, Joe Biden and President Trump have been mostly derailed from conducting the kind of campaigns voters have come to expect.
How that ultimately will factor into the outcome is unclear, but recent polling has provided encouraging news for the Democratic challenger.
In the Real Clear Politics average of national polls, Mr. Biden leads Mr. Trump by nearly nine points. That is the largest such gap at this point in the cycle by any candidate since President Clinton’s re-election campaign in 1996, based on historical poll averages compiled by political scientists Robert S. Erikson of Columbia University and Christopher Wlezien of the University of Texas at Austin. (Their methodology for computing historical daily poll averages differs somewhat from that of Real Clear Politics, but the data provide a reasonable baseline for comparing the current race.)
How poll averages have fluctuated during the period 100–200 days
before the election
80
%
Democrat
Republican
High during
this period: 67%
70
Actual share
of the vote
60
50
40
Low:
40%
30
20
1992
1996
2000
2004
2008
2012
2016
2020
Note: Based on share of the two-party vote
Sources: Real Clear Politics; Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University, and Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin; Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections
But perhaps more remarkable than the spread between the candidates has been the stability of the race thus far. Messrs. Biden and Trump have both polled in an unusually narrow range, with average support for each varying by only a few points in the past six months.
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In addition, the high end of Mr. Trump’s range hasn’t ever matched Mr. Biden’s polling floor to date. That hasn’t happened this close to Election Day since Sen. Bob Dole trailed far behind Mr. Clinton in 1996. Moreover, since 1992, the final national popular vote has nearly always fallen within the range of poll averages during the period between 100 and 200 days out.
Popular-vote winner’s polling at this point in the campaign vs. actual vote share
Actual share
of the vote
Trump’s current
polling support
Vote share in November
was higher than polling
at this point
70
%
65
Vote share
was lower
1964
1972
60
1984
1952
1980
1956
1996
55
1988
2008
2012
1992
1976
2016
2004
50
1968
2000
1960
45
40
Poll average 100 days before the election
35
40
45
50
55
60
65
70
%
Note: Average of polls; all data based on share of the two-party vote
Sources: Real Clear Politics; Robert S. Erikson, Columbia University, and Christopher Wlezien, University of Texas at Austin; Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections
The correlation between average poll standings at this point in the campaign and the final national popular vote is fairly strong. Nearly all of the outliers were candidates who were registering north of 60% of the two-party vote in poll averages 100 days out. Those eventual winners saw their support dampen a bit by Election Day, but most still won by comfortable margins.
Mr. Trump’s share of the two-party vote currently sits just above 45%, lower than any eventual popular-vote winner since 1988. But it is worth noting that then-Vice President George H.W. Bush overcame the biggest 100-day deficit of an eventual winner—nearly 20 points—thanks to a series of missteps by opponent Michael Dukakis and a hard-hitting ad campaign attacking the Democratic nominee.
Moreover, two popular-vote winners in the last 20 years lost in the Electoral College vote: Al Gore in 2000 and Hillary Clinton in 2016.
Polling averages and results in the closest states of 2016
2016
100 days out
current
Biden lead
final poll avg.
Michigan
actual
result
Pennsylvania
Wisconsin
8
6
4
2
Dem. lead
Rep. lead
2
points
Source: Real Clear Politics; Dave Leip’s Atlas of U.S. Presidential Elections
That popular vote/electoral vote split might be the most enduring lesson of 2016. While national polls were among the most accurate in estimating the popular vote since 1936—the final Real Clear Politics average gave Mrs. Clinton a 3.2-point advantage, while her actual popular-vote margin was 2.1 points—Mr. Trump emerged victorious thanks to narrow wins in key states, including Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. And state polls there missed the mark for various reasons.
However, in at least two of those states—Michigan and Pennsylvania—Mr. Biden’s current lead in poll averages is more than double what Mrs. Clinton’s was at the same point in time. That should be a sign of concern for the Trump campaign, since he won those three states by a combined 77,744 votes—just over one-half of 1% of the trio’s aggregate vote total.