If you want to know who is ahead in the presidential election, there are plenty of places to look these days.
Many media organizations have their own versions of presidential polling averages; unlike us, some even produce election forecasts, which take into account the state of the polls plus other relevant variables (like economic data) and then project who will be the likely victor.
At The Washington Post, we have our own polling average. It currently shows Vice President Kamala Harris with a two percentage point lead in the national popular vote. It also shows her ahead in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin — which, if the election happened today and the polls were spot on, would give her the barest electoral college majority. In our polling average, Donald Trump currently leads in Arizona and Georgia, while North Carolina and Nevada are virtually tied.
We understand there is a lot of data out there and it can be hard to differentiate between the different models and their methodologies. So we thought it might be useful to highlight and explain our approach.
It†s in the polls
The largest difference between our averages and others is that we only include the highest quality state and national polls. As we describe in our methodology: “We only include polls that are transparent about how they are conducted … and use methods that have demonstrated accuracy.â€� We also donâ€
Our polling team has evaluated different survey methods, and we only include those pollsters that apply the best ones. Things we consider include sampling size and respondent contacting methods, such as whether someone is only reached via the internet or a landline instead of via a cellphone. No matter how voters are contacted, the sample that pollsters end up with can still overrepresent certain segments of the electorate. We look at how pollsters adjust to account for the mismatch between their polling sample and the voting population and correct for the difference.
While it doesnâ€
We don†t overreact
Another distinguishing feature of our model is that itâ€
There are two reasons for that.
First, our model is designed not to overreact to tiny changes in the polls that may not be explained by actual shifts in the race. Smaller polling movements could be explained, for instance, by partisan nonresponse, which means one candidateâ€
If you follow our model closely, you might have noticed that in the week after the Sept. 10 debate between Harris and Trump, a few polls came out showing Harris with increased support.
But our model barely changed. That was partially because the polls were taken by pollsters that already showed better than average results for Harris in this election cycle relative to other pollsters (this observation does not imply that the pollster is biased, as such a trend can arise from different models of the electorate that are reasonable) so our model discounts gains by Harris reported by those polls a bit. But itâ€
And a few days later, we got additional high-quality polls that showed minor to no improvement for Harris after the debate, showing why our slow-and-steady approach is more useful.
Thatâ€
Itâ€
State and national
Another feature of our model worth highlighting is that estimates in each state adjust to new polling, even when that data is from national or out-of-state races.
This is important because there are many more national polls than state-level polls, and even less that we end up using because we are so picky about which polls we include. This means that in some states, we can go for long periods of time without any state-specific polls. Our national polls (and the polls from other similar states) help fill out the picture of what might be happening in key swing states that may be demographically similar.
A quick way to think about this is Nevada, where lately there have been fewer high-quality polls. But instead of flying blind in Nevada, our model relies on changes in the national environment (estimated by national polls) as well as polls from demographically similar states like Arizona, to give us an estimate for what might be happening in the Silver State. And since our national polls have been nearly constant for a few weeks, so has our average in Nevada.
This feature was especially beneficial right after Biden dropped out. For a few weeks, we were only getting high-quality national polls and no new state ones. But our approach allowed us to infer what was likely to be happening in the swing states, which is much more important for understanding who is likely to win the presidential election.
It†s not a forecast
Finally, an important thing to keep in mind about our polling average is that itâ€
Polls are a snapshot in time, but many things can happen between today and Election Day that a poll cannot account for. Other methods try to model the range of possible changes, but there are a lot of assumptions necessary to turn a polling average into a predictive forecast. These assumptions are often opaque and unverifiable. So weâ€
In sum, we believe our approach is the best way of understanding the current state of the race. We include the highest quality and most trustworthy polls; weâ€