What A Day - Poll: Biden Losing Ground In Battleground States, But Don't Panic
Episode Date: May 14, 2024Donald Trump leads President Biden in five of the six battleground states, according to two new polls released by the New York Times. These polls come at a time when Biden is struggling to win the sup...port of young voters. But while polls are an essential snapshot of the country, that snapshot is fairly narrow. So to discuss what these numbers do and do not tell us, we spoke with Dan Pfeiffer, a co-host of Pod Save America and the host of Pollercoaster.And in headlines: Michael Cohen takes the stand in Trump's hush money trial, three states hold primaries, and Louisiana could be the first state in the country to categorize abortion pills as controlled, dangerous substances. Show Notes:What A Day – YouTube – https://www.youtube.com/@whatadaypodcastFollow us on Instagram – https://www.instagram.com/crookedmedia/For a transcript of this episode, please visit crooked.com/whatadayJoin Crooked’s Friends of the Pod: http://Crooked.com/Friends
Transcript
Discussion (0)
It's Tuesday, May 14th. I'm Josie Duffy Rice.
And I'm Traevel Anderson, and this is What A Day, where we're putting a hex on the New York Times for trying to convince us that cicadas are an edible delicacy.
Yeah, they're calling cicadas the noisy lobsters of the trees, and that is a quote I am calling the FDA.
No, I don't accept.
No, thank you. No, thank you. I'm opting out.
On today's show, Louisiana lawmakers could classify abortion pills as dangerous,
addictive drugs. Plus, Donald Trump's former attorney and fixer, Michael Cohen,
takes the stand in the Trump hush money trial. But first, in startling news,
Donald Trump leads President Biden in five of the six battleground states, according to two
new polls released Monday by the New York Times. Biden leads by two points in Wisconsin, while
Trump is up in Pennsylvania, Arizona, Michigan, Georgia, and Nevada. And while three of those
states remain within the margin of error, in Georgia
and Nevada, Trump has a very, very commanding lead. I don't like the sound of this, Josie.
Now, do we know why Biden is losing so significantly? Yeah, well, Biden has struggled
with young voters, as we've talked about on the show, in particular in recent months,
in part due to his administration's support for Israel in the war on Gaza. But it's actually not just Gaza. The current
economy is also a point of contention for voters and is likely driving at least some of the diluted
enthusiasm around his campaign. That makes plenty of sense to me. But obviously for Democrats,
this is not the hopeful picture for the fall election I'm sure they were wishing for.
It is definitely concerning.
But while polls are an important snapshot of the country, they're also kind of a narrow snapshot of the country, right?
And so to understand what these numbers mean, I called up Dan Pfeiffer.
He's a co-host of Pods of America and the host of Polar Coaster, our exclusive podcast all about polls for our Friends of the Pod subscribers.
And I started by asking him if Democrats should be in panic mode after seeing these polls.
You should never panic. Panic is a very counterproductive response to anything,
right? So it's like, no, you should not run around like a chicken with your head cut off.
But I just want to remind everyone that polls are not predictive. This poll does not tell us
really anything about what is going to happen
in November. It tells us what's happening right now here in early May. And the picture is not
super pretty, but take them seriously, but not literally, right? Try to like look at what the
broad trends say, how do voters feel and worry a little bit less about whether Biden's up by two
or down by two or whether Trump's lead went from six to eight. It just focused more on what it says about where voters' heads are right now.
Because from the perspective of people trying to win the election, that's how you divide
your plan to win, right?
As you read these polls, you understand what people are thinking about.
Then you go persuade them to feel better about your candidate and worse about your opponent.
I do want to ask, is what we're seeing a real question about whether voters are going to
vote for Biden versus Trump or whether Biden-leading voters are going to vote for Biden versus Trump, or whether Biden
leading voters are going to turn out, or Trump leading voters are going to turn out.
It's both, really. This poll looked at both registered voters, so anyone who is registered
to vote, whether they state how certain they are to vote in 2024, and likely voters, people who
have expressed an intention to vote in 2024. And Biden does better
with likely voters. And Biden always does better with more politically engaged voters. Biden does
better with midterm voters. He does even better with special election voters. So the more politically
engaged you are, the more you are for Biden. What that says is that Trump depends on voters without
a great history of voting. That's sort of the opposite of how politics used to be.
It used to be Democrats who really needed high turnout to win.
But particularly since the Trump era, we've become a party where our base votes all the time.
And so when it's our base versus their base, we win.
When Trump is able to expand into these people who are less certain voters, then he wins.
So this poll looks at it both ways.
Now, to be, you know,
sort of brutally honest about it, Trump is winning under both scenarios, right? He certainly gets a
270 electoral votes under both scenarios. But the more certain voters are more pro Biden than the
electorate at large. Can you remind our listeners which battleground states Biden won four years
ago and how crucial these six states are for him to be reelected. Biden won all of these states in 2020,
most of them by very, very narrow margins,
often less than a point, but he won all six of them.
Now to get to 270 electoral votes,
he doesn't need to win all six.
He can get there simply by winning Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, Michigan.
And what this poll shows is those states
are essentially tied.
So the president's campaign for reelection
is trying to kind of redirect
attention from this poll. They're trying to direct attention more to this Democratic pollster,
Simon Rosenberg. And Rosenberg is saying that it's too early to tell, that the results are,
quote, inconsistent. And he also said, quote, the reality is that many voters are not paying
close attention to the election and have not started making up their minds. These voters
will decide this election and only the Biden campaign is doing the work to win them over. Is this correct? Talk to us about Simon Rosenberg. Like,
is it actually too early? How should we interpret that statement?
Yeah, I mean, Simon is a very, very smart guy who's worked in democratic politics for a long
time. And in this election, he is someone who has repeatedly pointed out that Biden is on the path to win, regardless of what the polls say.
Where Simon, I think, is correct here is really, essentially, a one-point lead in Pennsylvania,
Wisconsin, and Michigan is essentially a tie. That is a tied race. The Biden campaign has
built a massive organization that is much larger and drastically outpaces what Trump is building,
which gives him an advantage
in a close race. It is certainly too early. Simon is correct that voters haven't tuned in yet.
There's a large persuadable universe here. It's also clear that Biden has real work to do.
He is underperforming specifically with voters under 30, Hispanic voters, and Black voters. He
has largely maintained his 2020 margins with white voters and older voters,
and these three groups who have sort of frayed from the anti-MAGA or the Biden coalition. He's
got to get them back. Now, there's some good news there, which is that these voters in general,
even though they're unhappy with Joe Biden right now, have voted for him in the past,
disagree with Donald Trump on a lot of issues, including abortion, and have a history of voting
for Democrats. And so they are voters who are
very persuadable, but there is work to do. And six months is a long time, but time is moving fast
here. So we know that in some of these swing states, Democrats are leading in key Senate races.
So Bob Casey is polling five points ahead of his Republican opponent in Pennsylvania.
Ruben Gallego, the Phoenix Democrat, four points ahead of Trump ally sycophant Carrie Lake in Arizona. And yet Biden is struggling. So what do we attribute that to?
What issues are at play here when it comes to this lower approval rating?
What's really interesting about this is that the Senate Democratic candidates are winning because
they are getting typical Democratic levels of
support from Democratic-based voters like voters under 30, Black voters, and Hispanic voters.
So there are sort of three theories as to why that is the case. All of them could be somewhat
correct. One is that Biden has a particular weakness among these three groups for whatever
reasons. The other could be that Donald Trump has a strength among these groups that other Republicans do not have. And the third reason is the economy, right? In this poll,
three quarters of voters say the economy is fair or poor. Young voters, Hispanic voters,
and Black voters think it's even worse than that. Typically, voters do not hold senators
accountable for the economy. They want the senators to vote for the right things. They care about who's in control of the Senate. But in general, they associate the
president with the price of eggs and gas and rent and the unemployment rate in a way they do not
hold senators accountable. So you can see a world in which voters who generally align with Democrats
on other issues, but are very upset about the economy, very frustrated with the economy,
will hold Joe Biden accountable for that, but not Ruben Gallego, Bob Casey, Tammy Baldwin, or some
of these other candidates.
Another thing we've talked a lot about on the show is just the disarray of the Republican
Party in terms of leadership, obviously.
There's the mess in the House of Representatives right now.
Their party's frontrunner is stuck in court facing criminal charges.
At last count, they've had 19 speakers of the House. That's my own count. In just the past few months, it feels like. So
these sound like things that should work in Biden's favor here. And it almost seems like
they're not. What do you make of that? They still could work in his favor. Like,
one of my takeaways from this poll is the more voters know about Joe Biden and Donald Trump,
the better Joe Biden does.
To the point you asked about Simon Rosenberg earlier is voters have not fully tuned into this race. Many of them have tuned out of politics. There have been fundamental changes
in the media ecosystem that make it harder for casual news consumers to follow politics. It
doesn't show up in your Facebook feed anymore. Fewer people are watching local news and broadcast
news and cable news. And so people are not tuned in yet.
And when people tune in, that's our opportunity to educate them about what Biden's done, what
Biden will do, and as importantly, what Donald Trump will do.
The fact that he wants to cut Social Security and Medicare, the fact that he is okay with
even the most extreme total abortion bans at the state level, that he would probably,
despite what he has said, sign a federal abortion ban, that he wants to essentially use the White House to give himself legal immunity,
reward his friends, and go on a retribution tour against his enemies.
Voters don't know that yet.
That's information we can give them.
And so just because something hasn't hurt Trump yet doesn't mean it's not going to hurt
him over the next few months.
Do you get the sense that people have forgotten what the Trump years were like?
There does seem to be some sort of short-term memory
on the chaos of the Trump administration.
There is a real Trump amnesia effect.
The Trump presidency for a lot of these voters
is like frozen in amber from February of 2020.
And the focus is on the price of eggs, gas, groceries,
whatever else.
But it's also that huge swaths of this country And the focus is on the price of eggs, gas, groceries, whatever else.
But it's also that huge swaths of this country tuned out of politics the day we were allowed to leave our houses in 2021.
Donald Trump was gone.
People started to live their lives again.
They checked out the news.
And most people did not think about Trump for like four straight years.
They haven't seen him.
We see all these clips of him acting like a lunatic at a rally in Wildwood, New Jersey
or at the courthouse.
Most people don't see that.
They're totally unaware of it.
Absence has made the heart grow a little fonder.
And it's going to be incumbent upon the Biden campaign and us to remind people what it was like, right, and what the consequences of having him come back to office are.
It's become a slightly generic alternative to Biden.
And we need to fill in the blanks there.
That is the latest for now.
We will get to some headlines in a moment. But if you like our show, make sure to subscribe and share it with your friends and your family and your frenemies and your coworkers and the person on the bus.
Just tell everybody.
And their mama.
Everybody and their mama.
And if you want more of Dan, tune into Polar Coaster, available exclusively to Crooked subscribers.
To get access or learn more about the Friends of the Pod community, head to crooked.com slash friends. We will be back after some ads.
Let's get to some headlines.
Headlines.
Donald Trump's former fixer and personal lawyer, Michael Cohen, took the stand for six hours on Trump signed off on the plan to buy Silence
from adult film star Stormy Daniels for $130,000. Cohen needed to secure that money himself,
and in court, he said Trump promised to pay him back. This detail is crucial to the government's
claim that Trump falsified business records when he later classified reimbursements to Cohen
as normal legal expenses. Prosecutors from the Manhattan District Attorney's office will finish
questioning Cohen today, and then Cohen will undergo cross-examination by Trump's defense
lawyers. Cohen is by far the prosecution's most important witness. Trump's legal team has already
made clear their intent to attack his
credibility by highlighting his 2018 felony conviction and suggesting that he is motivated
by a desire for revenge. Maryland, West Virginia, and Nebraska are holding primaries today. In the
West Virginia governor's race, local Republicans are competing with each other to see who can be
the most transphobic candidate. In Maryland, the traditional sleepy Democratic Senate primary is shaping up to be more competitive
and contentious than usual, as rich guy Representative David Trone, the owner of Total
Wine and More, faces off against Prince George's County executive and former prosecutor Angela
Also Brooks. Former Maryland Governor Larry Hogan is also running in the Republican primary for the Senate seat. Louisiana could become the first state in the country to categorize abortion pills
as controlled dangerous substances, meaning fines and jail time for any non-healthcare professional
caught in the possession of the drugs without a prescription. A pregnant woman who obtained
the pills for herself would be exempt from prosecution, but a friend helping her get the pills could be charged with a crime
and face up to five years in prison. The amendment proposed by Louisiana Republicans would add
abortion pills to a list of criminalized addictive drugs like opioids and depressants, even though
more than 200 Louisiana doctors signed a letter pointing
out that this makes no scientific sense. Because, in case you were wondering, mifepristone, which
is the most common abortion pill, is actually safer than Viagra and penicillin. Thousands of
Mercedes-Benz autoworkers in Alabama began voting Monday on whether to join the United Auto Workers Union or UAW.
In April, 73% of Volkswagen workers in Tennessee voted to join the UAW,
granting the union a huge win in its drive to organize in the South.
The Tuscaloosa area vote could prove to be more challenging, however.
Last week, the UAW accused Mercedes-Benz of union busting much more aggressively than Volkswagen.
The National Labor Relations Board will announce the vote tally on Friday.
And we are about to find out what really happened behind the scenes of the daytime talk show hosted
by Ellen DeGeneres in a new Netflix special from comedian Ellen DeGeneres. DeGeneres announced the
show on Monday, writing, quote, Yes, I'm going to talk about it in a press release.
The it she's referring to is probably her messy exit from The Ellen DeGeneres Show in 2022,
following allegations of a toxic workplace and harassment by executive producers.
She also said this would be her last special, capping off a long and trailblazing career
that saw her star as the first
gay or lesbian lead character on a u.s network television show tbd whether ellen's new act allows
her to dance her way back into you all's hearts while touring this year the comedian has said
that after the allegations hit she was the quote most hated person in amer. That's crazy.
In America?
I wish.
I wish our biggest controversy was Ellen DeGeneres.
That sounds lovely.
I'm sure it felt like she was the most hated person in America.
But that's why you go to therapy to get perspective.
There is that.
And those are the headlines.
One more thing before we go.
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Us too.
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at crooked.com slash subscribe i'm trey bell anderson i'm josie defy rice and you can't make
us eat cicadas i eat a lot of wild things such as chitlins josie But I don't know if I can bring myself to do the cicada.
I'll eat cicadas
when there are no
other options left.
But we're not there yet.
We're not there yet.
I'm not going to eat
something out loud.
It's too stressful.
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