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Most Powerful Women Summit 2024: Election 2024 - Breaking Down The Polls
Fortune
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10/15/2024
Presenter: Kristen Soltis Anderson, Political Pollster; Founder, Echelon Insights
Category
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Tech
Transcript
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00:00
So my name is Kristen Soltis-Anderson. I am the founder of Echelon Insights. We're an opinion research firm that works for brands,
00:07
advocacy groups, and
00:08
occasionally we dabble in politics. And so every two to four years around
00:13
pumpkin spice season, as a political pollster, I get asked one question over and over and over.
00:20
And that question is, what will happen? What's going to happen in this election?
00:25
Everybody wants to know. And part of that is just natural curiosity.
00:29
It's kind of like how a kid on Christmas wants to know what's under the tree, and they might
00:34
shake the box to see what's inside. Is it a toy or a lump of coal?
00:38
Except in my world, the box is Pennsylvania. What's inside?
00:42
Is it a lump of coal or a toy? Which candidate is the lump of coal may vary depending on your political persuasion.
00:49
But nevertheless, what we're trying to figure out is
00:52
what is it that voters are going to do when this election season
00:56
wraps. And the reason why so many people care about this may be curiosity, it may be
01:01
entertainment for some, but for the women in this room, the reason why you want to be able to
01:06
see what is going on in the future is because you need to be able to prepare your companies.
01:11
There are going to be policies that may be different, things that affect your bottom line, things that affect your employees,
01:17
your ability to do business around the world, that matter whether one candidate or the other wins the election.
01:24
So I get asked that question a lot because people are rightfully very anxious and know that there are huge amounts of things at stake.
01:32
But this is not a very easy election to predict. There's a piece written by a variety of folks at Politico.
01:39
They pulled together about a dozen different academics,
01:43
pundits, advocates, to all come together and try to figure out what is the black swan event that could affect this election.
01:50
This was a piece from January, and it has stuck with me ever since because of the dozen or so things that they talk about,
01:58
not just one, but many of them have already occurred.
02:02
The article included a number of people who said, I predict that it would be unpredictable,
02:06
but possible for a climate change-fueled natural disaster to affect our battleground states in the weeks leading up to election day.
02:13
One person wrote that they believed the debate over abortion was only going to get more intense, and this article came out
02:20
just weeks before the Alabama Supreme Court's ruling on IVF.
02:24
We had some who predicted that there could be a death at a Trump rally, or a
02:28
violent attempt on a candidate's life, both of which sadly came true at that rally in Butler, Pennsylvania.
02:34
In fact, in that article,
02:36
most of the things did wind up coming to pass in one way or another, except for one. If you have the
02:41
aliens making contact on your bingo card, we still have a few weeks.
02:46
They still have time, but I just put this up here to underscore how unbelievably
02:51
unpredictable this election has been, to say nothing of the fact that the two candidates on the ballot at the top of the ticket
02:58
are not the two candidates we thought we would have back in January at the start of the year.
03:03
So knowing all of this, I want to then give some context for how
03:07
stable this election has been in the face of chaos. So back in
03:12
2008, you had an election where you had John McCain, Barack Obama.
03:16
They were in a race of their lifetimes, and in that race,
03:20
the polls were all over the place. When we took a look at how far the margins were apart on these polls,
03:26
we found that John McCain, at one point in the last two months before Election Day,
03:33
John McCain at one point was up by three, and then Barack Obama was up by seven, a ten-point swing.
03:39
We then also had Mitt Romney and Barack Obama in their election. The swing there was about
03:45
five points. It went from a Romney minus one to an Obama plus four. We had Trump versus Clinton.
03:52
That was an election where the polls in the closing weeks
03:55
had about a six-point worth of swing, and the last election as well only about four points.
03:59
But still, in those closing weeks, we expect the polls to move a lot.
04:03
And so then I looked. Since Labor Day, how much has this race moved?
04:08
It has not moved at all.
04:10
I had to go to decimal points in order to show any sort of difference between where this race stood.
04:16
So that's just to give you some context for how unbelievably stable it is, and it is the same way in the battleground states.
04:22
We see Georgia, North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Arizona, Wisconsin, Nevada, and Michigan are all races
04:28
that are not just within the margin of error.
04:31
They are essentially within a point. Our friends at AARP put out a poll today of voters in Michigan.
04:36
It had Harris 46, Trump 46.
04:40
So as somebody who works in the statistical profession,
04:43
it would be irresponsible of me to tell you that I knew how this election was going to go.
04:48
So instead what I'll tell you is why is this race so close, and why isn't it moving at all?
04:54
So we'll start with why it's so close.
04:56
Part of why this race is so close is that the candidates at the top of the ticket are now very evenly matched on
05:02
two criteria that voters say is incredibly important.
05:05
Who will make the country safe, and who will make the economy better?
05:09
Back when Joe Biden was at the top of the tickets, my polls showed Donald Trump with a
05:14
fairly sizable lead on a variety of these metrics.
05:17
But since Democrats made the change and Kamala Harris became the Democrats nominee,
05:21
we now can see that you have keeping our country safe and making our economy work better as even, and
05:27
the important metric of being competent and effective has now swung decisively in the Democrats favor.
05:34
But why then do we still have such a close race if those numbers had moved so much?
05:38
The reality is that we're incredibly polarized, and I want to double-click for a second on what our polarization means.
05:44
Some people think our polarization means that half of America believes one thing and half of America believes the other.
05:50
At my firm, we've done lots of experiments where we ask people what they think about their different political and partisan views,
05:56
and we find that the vast majority of Americans take a little from column A and a little from column B.
06:01
They are not entirely Republican or entirely Democratic in their worldview.
06:05
The reason why we are so polarized is because voters look at the other side,
06:11
and they think these are people that want to harm me, and they have the power to do so.
06:16
Republicans and Democrats increasingly view their side as losing, and when you feel less powerful,
06:22
you are more willing to excuse bad behavior of the others in the foxhole with you.
06:26
You're more willing to do or accept whatever it will take for your side to win, and that's where we find ourselves today.
06:33
And so that's why this race is so evenly divided, because people across this country
06:40
really feel set in their tribe and are concerned about what happens if the other side takes power.
06:46
But then why does the race not move?
06:48
Well, there are so few people who really don't know how they feel about all of this that that's why this isn't moving very much.
06:55
So back in May, I wrote a piece about Donald Trump and why his brand image has remained so stable.
07:01
And part of it is because he has been a factor in American life for decades.
07:06
My entire time on this planet, Donald Trump has been a celebrity of some kind.
07:11
And so it's important to keep that in mind.
07:13
When we look at those other races where the polls swung one way or another,
07:17
it was because voters were still getting to know the candidates at the top of the ticket.
07:21
In this race, we have one anchoring force, Donald Trump, who people know how they feel about him, love him or hate him.
07:29
And so his views have been locked in place pretty strongly, even as Kamala Harris has consolidated the views of Democrats,
07:36
has gotten more people within her own party to say that they think that she is a strong candidate and she can do well.
07:42
But if her brand image is moving and Trump's isn't, then why isn't she decisively winning?
07:47
It's because there is a small but very significant portion of voters who do not like Donald Trump,
07:54
but nevertheless say they intend to vote for him.
07:57
I call these voters the begrudging Trump voters.
08:00
Again, it's about seven percent of them.
08:02
And they say, I don't not like him, but it doesn't matter.
08:05
I had a focus group where I talked to one voter.
08:07
She was a moderate former Republican voter in Pennsylvania, but she still said she planned to vote for Donald Trump anyways.
08:15
And I asked her why.
08:16
And she said, if I go to the doctor and I need heart surgery, I don't care if I don't like the heart surgeon.
08:22
I just want him to do a good job.
08:24
And in her view, she thought that Donald Trump would do a good job on the issues that mattered to her.
08:29
There are a lot of voters going to the polls this year who do not like the candidates that they have on offer,
08:36
but are nevertheless of the mind that this is an election with enormously high stakes and they're going to participate.
08:42
So I'll leave you then with one voter who really doesn't like the options available to her either,
08:46
but has nevertheless decided to vote for Kamala Harris.
08:49
I don't know if this will resonate with any of you in this room,
08:51
but this was from a focus group I did for The New York Times back just a few weeks ago.
08:55
This respondent, her name is Kay.
08:57
She's 61.
08:58
She was a Biden voter in 2020.
08:59
And she said, I voted for Biden because I thought he was a little bit more than the lesser of two evils.
09:05
Harris, I just don't know enough about her.
09:07
But I don't think Trump can string five words together to make a sentence.
09:10
He's a global embarrassment.
09:12
Everybody says if I don't vote, it's a vote for Trump.
09:14
So I guess I have to vote.
09:16
I'm not going to love it.
09:17
I'm not going to enjoy it.
09:18
I'm not going to have fun.
09:20
There might be wine afterwards.
09:22
I wish I could tell you the answer to what will happen in this election, but statistically, I can't.
09:27
The polls are simply too close.
09:29
All I can do is tell you to be prepared for anything.
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