If You Think Bernie Sanders Is Already Done, You’re Looking at the Wrong Polls
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National Democratic primary polling is beginning to turn against Bernie Sanders, and through that lens, it really does look like he is now a measurable third to Elizabeth Warren’s second place charge against Joe Biden. However, national polls are the wrong way to think about this race, given that the primary is determined on a state by state basis. This misfocus is emblematic of the major blind spot the Democratic Party demonstrated this past decade by losing a thousand seats over the course of the Obama presidency: national politics may give us our favorite TV characters, but all politics is local. The Republicans get this—which is why they have most of the power in this country—and if you want to properly understand how any presidential primary will unfold, you must look at state by state polls.
So to test this narrative of decline that’s beginning to take root against Bernie (which is compounded by genuinely bad polling for Sanders in the first state to vote in Iowa), I put together a very basic spreadsheet using the most recent state-level polls from FiveThirtyEight, and the RealClearPolitics average for Iowa, New Hampshire, Nevada, South Carolina, California, Massachusetts and Texas, then averaged it all out.
This is an imperfect way to obtain a specific figure, as not all polls are created equal nor taken at the same time, but it is a quick and dirty snapshot of where current polling stands. The race is young enough that no polling should be taken as gospel yet, and not enough polls have been taken to get a full 50 state sample. These figures only include 32 states, with 25 of the 32 slated to vote before April 4th, 2020—about midway through the primary schedule.
With all those qualifiers, here is where our best polling currently stands via this crude state-by-state average:
Biden: 29.8%
Warren: 16.4%
Sanders: 15.7%
I do not believe that this proves that Bernie and Warren are in a near-tie as this imperfect average demonstrates, and I do think that she has quite possibly edged ahead of him given that most newer polling is generally more positive for Warren. However, this notion that Elizabeth Warren has clearly defeated Bernie Sanders to win the battle for the soul of the left, and is ready to turn this primary into a primetime showdown with Biden, is only supported by a handful of polls that ultimately do not matter. The ones that do matter don’t prove anything demonstrative other than a semi-comfortable lead for Joe Biden.
Given the frontrunner’s obvious shortcomings and the fact that Bernie Sanders is about as popular among the Democratic over-50 crowd as Donald Trump is, Elizabeth Warren does seem to be in the best position to win the primary going forward.