Trump’s RNC Gambit from the White House Cuts Into Biden’s Lead in the 2020 Election for President

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By Glynn Wilson –

Just when you thought the Democrats were trending up, up and away from the Republicans in the polls in election 2020, just two months away, and the pundits were downplaying the concept of a party convention bounce in the era of the novel coronavirus and the virtual convention, low and behold President Donald Trump’s gambit to put on his show from the White House appears to have paid off, even though it was a blatant violation of the Hatch Act to do it.

“President Donald Trump needed a convention bounce — and he got one, emerging from the Republican National Convention with an improved standing against Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden, fueled by gains among white voters and those in the suburbs, though he still trails the former vice president nationwide,” according to the new numbers just out from the Morning Consult polling firm.

In a survey conducted on Friday of 4,035 likely voters, a poll with only a 2-point margin of error asking which candidate they would pick, the results showed Democrat Joe Biden still leading Trump by 6 percentage points, 50 percent to 44 percent.

The poll shows a 4-point bounce for Trump from his standing heading into the convention on August 23, when Biden led by 10 points, 52 percent to 42 percent.

“The movement stands in contrast to voters’ reaction to the Democratic National Convention held the previous week, when Biden’s lead over Trump went statistically unchanged,” the analysts say. It harkens back to the bump in support that Trump saw after the 2016 Republican National Convention. “However, due to a smaller share of undecided voters, Biden, who continues to have about half of the electorate’s support, remains in a significantly stronger position than Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton was four years ago.”

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The poll results come after a convention that was less watched than the Democratic National Convention a week before, according to The New York Times, which reports that an average of 19.4 million people watched the Republican gathering each night on live TV, compared to 21.6 million who watched the DNC. Trump’s acceptance speech was viewed live by 23.8 million, less than Biden’s 24.6 million the week before.

The four-day event, held mostly in Washington and capped off by a Trump speech to a crowd of supporters on the White House lawn, painted a picture of Trump’s successes and strength following a week in which Democrats cast the incumbent as a failed leader, based largely on his handling of the coronavirus pandemic. The president and his allies also sought to claim the mantle of the party of law and order and a last line of defense against a creeping radical socialism from the Democratic Party, messaging largely aimed at white people and suburbanites, two key demographics Trump must pickup to win in November.

With the depiction of the kinder, gentler Trump depicted at the RNC, Trump cut into Biden’s lead among voters in the suburbs. Before the convention, Biden led by 14 points (54 percent to 40 percent), but after the convention, he led by 8 points (50 percent to 42 percent).



Trump also improved his margin among white voters, leading Biden 51 percent to 43 percent on Friday compared with a 2-point edge earlier in the week. That included a 6-point gain in his advantage among white voters without a college degree, a demographic led by Trump 57 to 36 percent.

Trump left the convention with a slightly worse standing among voters of color, however, trailing Biden by 28 points among Hispanic voters (33 percent to 61 percent) and 74 points among Black voters (9 percent to 83 percent).

“Despite some improvement in the head-to-head numbers for Trump, the Republican convention did not improve voters’ perceptions about Trump as the Democratic convention did Biden’s,” according to the analysis of the numbers. “A majority of voters (55 percent) continue to view (Trump) unfavorably, while 43 percent view him favorably.”

The event does appear to have diminished voters’ record-high views of Biden, they say, whose favorability rating fell from 51 percent to 49 percent and was paired with a 1-point increase in unfavorable views, from 46 percent to 47 percent.