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Daily Hit of Hopium

Well, well, well:

New CBS poll:

While Republicans continue to lead with people who prioritize the economy, at least three things are tempering their overall advantage:

-Abortion rights: it’s still on voters’ minds, buttressing Democratic support and helping them with women in swing districts. 

-Gas prices: most report prices in their area coming down, and with them, views of Biden’s handling the economy are up a bit – part of a slight rebound we see among the Democratic base.

The extent to which this election is about anything other than a still-shaky economy, such as:

-Donald Trump — while midterm elections are often referenda on the sitting president, this one is about the former, too. For a majority of voters he’s a factor, either to support or oppose him. Democrats are winning voters whose vote is based “a lot” on how they feel about Trump.

-Republican nominees: both women and independents (key voting groups) are more likely to say it’s Republicans who’ve been nominating candidates they’d call extreme – more so than Democrats’ nominees.

What about Mar-a-Lago and the documents search?

File it under “About Donald Trump.” The FBI search hasn’t directly changed many votes because of the sharp partisan splits over it, but then, it could be part of a larger issue holding back Republicans, as Donald Trump stays on voters’ minds.

-Trump is a big positive for his own partisans, but they were voting Republican anyway. Most rank-and-file Republicans want party leaders to stand with Trump here and not criticize him. But that sets up a challenge for the GOP because…

-Trump is net-negative for independents. Independents would prefer Republicans criticize Trump to support him on Mar-a-Lago. Half of independent voters name Trump as a factor in their vote, and by four to one, they’re voting to oppose him (far worse than Biden’s support-oppose ratio).

-Most independents, like most Democrats, see the Mar-a-Lago search as an attempt to protect national security. They differ from Republicans, who see a political attack on Trump.

Abortion

Why it’s emerged as a big factor:

-There’s a widespread perception among women that if Republicans gain power, they’ll make restricting abortion a priority (65%), even more so than inflation (56%).

-More Democrats (77%) say abortion is “very important” than describe any other issue that way — it’s neck-and-neck with gun policy and ahead of the economy and inflation. 

-By more than two to one, likely voters say their vote for Congress will be to support abortion rights rather than to oppose them. 

-Motivation around the issue is one-sided: Republicans tend to say their vote isn’t about abortion, but most Democrats say the overturning of Roe boosted their support for their party’s candidates.

-It might help Democratic candidates with people on the fence: third-party and undecided voters for whom the overturning of Roe is a factor say it makes them want to support Democrats over Republicans by four to one.

Related: Watch key group of college-degree women

In the last two elections, White women with college degrees were critical to Democrats’ winning coalition, voting for them by double-digit margins. And then this year amid economic pessimism, Democrats slipped with this group.

Today we see Democrats rebounding: their lead with White college-degree-holding women has increased by seven points since July and is currently 13 points. It’s not back to 2018 levels, but helps account for some of the shift in seats because these women are critical in key swing districts.

More of those who were undecided have moved toward the Democrats, for now. The issue of abortion is a motivator — most say their vote this year will be to support abortion rights.

And then there’s this:

The views on the economy are more positive and it’s largely because Democratic voters are approving of Dark Brandon. His approval is up even on the economy although it’s still pretty anemic.

This is important:

Look at young people, whom the Democrats count on: the cancellation of some student loan debt is particularly popular among voters under age 30. And the president’s overall approval rating has moved into positive territory among them now, up from last month.

This poll estimates the Republicans will still win the House but very narrowly. That means it’s not out of the question that the Dems could hold it. Whether they will all depends on turnout. As always.

Published inUncategorized