Former president Donald Trumpâ€
“President Trumpâ€
Letâ€
There was something else interesting in the poll: While Georgia voters preferred Trump by three points in the poll, they predicted by an 11-point margin that Harris would win.
While 48 percent thought Harris would win, just 37 percent said the same of Trump.
This is somewhat unusual. Itâ€
First, the latest data. This is not the only recent poll showing voters — by a significant margin — expect Harris to win.
An AP-NORC poll released Thursday showed voters said by double digits (38-28) that they expect Harris to win. Thatâ€
An Economist-YouGov poll released Wednesday showed much the same thing. Voters by double digits (42-32) expected Harris to win, after saying so by just three points in YouGov polling last month and saying by 19 points that Trump would win back in July.
In each poll, we see independents predicting a Harris win by double digits and even a significant number of Republicans sharing that sentiment: 14 percent in the Georgia poll, 13 percent in the Economist-YouGov poll and 10 percent in the AP-NORC poll.
You might be asking yourself: What does the average voter know about whoâ€
Well, some research suggests that this is actually a good measure of where things might end up — possibly even a better measure than merely asking people whom they intend to vote for.
The reason is that it involves people accounting for the preferences of the people around them — turning them into “mini-anthropologists,� in the words of longtime Gallup editor in chief Frank Newport — and possibly even hinting at their own hidden or subconscious preferences.
A 2012 paper from economists David Rothschild of Microsoft Research and Justin Wolfers of the University of Michigan actually found that this question was more predictive of election outcomes than polls of voting intent.
Looking at 60 years of state polls that asked such questions, it found that the presidential candidates people expected to win won those states 81 percent of the time, while the polling leaders won 69 percent of the time.
The paper argued that election forecasting once relied more on such predictions and should return to that practice. Rothschild, in a New York Times interview, called it an “amazingly powerful forecast mechanism.�
While itâ€
The 2012 race between then-President Barack Obama and Mitt Romney polled very tight in the closing weeks. But polls at the same time consistently showed Americans by double digits expected Obama to win, which he did.
More recently, President Joe Bidenâ€
The same poll questions were also more bullish on Trump in 2016 than other forecasts, before Trump pulled off his shocking win.
Itâ€