Welcome to The Campaign Moment, your guide to the biggest developments in a stubborn 2024 race thatâ€
(Make sure youâ€
The big moment
Itâ€
A literal criminal conviction of one of the candidates, after all, had a muted impact. And President Bidenâ€
Well, weâ€
On the plus side for Harris, she appears to be pulling in some key, Democratic-leaning voter groups that had soured on a Biden-led Democratic ticket, and her poor image seems to have improved. Sheâ€
The toplines
While an NPR/PBS/Marist College poll showed a slight gain for Trump, three others this week showed the Democratic ticket gaining at least a few points. Democrats gained four points in a Reuters/Ipsos poll, three points in a CNN poll Wednesday and five points in a New York Times/Siena College poll Thursday.
All show the national race is now neck-and-neck — between a three-point Trump lead and a two-point Harris lead.
The Marist poll was probably a bit of an outlier at the time — it actually showed Biden ahead by two points earlier this month — and itâ€
And those arenâ€
The key groups
One of the big ones is young voters. The CNN poll showed the Democratic ticket gaining five points among voters under 30 since April and June. The Times/Siena poll showed it gaining 11 points since earlier this month. The Marist poll showed fewer young people ditching the ticket for third-party candidates in a crowded race.
Another is Black and Latino voters. The CNN poll showed Democrats gaining seven and six points with those groups, respectively. The Marist poll showed Trumpâ€
These are important numbers, because these were perhaps the three most troubling groups for a Biden-led Democratic ticket. The groups have favored Democrats by substantial margins for decades, but Biden was performing historically poorly among them. And notably, the Marist poll showed significant increases in enthusiasm among all three — higher than most any other group.
Beyond that, Harris appears to have gained some popularity. The Reuters/Ipsos poll showed her image going from 14 points underwater (39 percent favorable, 53 percent unfavorable) last week to just six points underwater (44 to 50). The Times/Siena poll showed her favorable rating rising 10 points since February. And the CNN poll showed her with her highest favorable rating since 2021.
The caveats
But even that latter number was far from sterling — 39 percent favorable vs. 52 percent unfavorable. For all the Democratic talk about the game being changed, they still have a likely nominee who is more disliked than liked in all of these polls.
There are also conflicting findings on how older and White voters might have shifted, raising the possibility that Harris could lose ground with some voters while gaining with others.
And in the meantime, Trumpâ€
Itâ€
If thereâ€
But the 2024 script has proved difficult to rewrite before. And weâ€
Another moment you might have missed
There has been debate within the Democratic Party about how much they should focus on Trumpâ€
The early signs are that Harris intends to drive it home early and often:
NEW: We just launched the first video of our campaign.
“We choose freedom.�pic.twitter.com/AJ2WCAupRt
— Kamala HQ (@KamalaHQ) July 25, 2024
- The campaignâ€
s first ad, released Thursday morning on social media, features a reference to how “no one is above the law,â€� while images of Trump†s mug shot and headlines about his Manhattan conviction flash on screen. - The campaign later Thursday put out a press release off Trumpâ€
s Fox News interview titled, “Statement on a 78-Year-Old Criminal†s Fox News Appearance.â€� - In the most oft-quoted and -clipped line from Harrisâ€
s presidential campaign debut Tuesday, she prominently featured her time as a prosecutor and California attorney general. “In those roles, I took on perpetrators of all kinds: predators who abused women, fraudsters who ripped off consumers, cheaters who broke the rules for their own gain,� Harris said, as the crowd began to pick up on where she was going. “So hear me when I say: I know Donald Trump†s type.�
While Biden made reference to Trumpâ€
Harris stepping forward could change the dynamic somewhat. Sheâ€
A momentous number
29 percent, 32 percent, 33 percent
Those are the percentages of respondents who said Biden should resign from the presidency right now in the CNN, Marist and Reuters/Ipsos polls. In each, around twice as many or more said he should stay.
Thatâ€
One is that after Biden pulled out, Republicans set about arguing that he must resign, too. Another is that a huge majority of Americans have said for a long time that Biden is too old and not mentally sharp enough to serve as president.
The lesson: Americans seem to see a difference between Biden not being up to the job for four more years and being able to serve out the next six months.
Itâ€
Take a moment to read:
- “‘Not going to be niceâ€
: Trump, Harris trade sharp attacks as 2024 race resets� (Washington Post) - “Biden seeks to define his legacy in address explaining his campaign exit� (Washington Post)
- “What key-state voters think about Kamala Harris replacing Joe Biden� (Washington Post)
- “Why almost everyone assumes Kamala Harris has to pick a White man as VP� (Washington Post)
- “Could Republicans get buyerâ€
s remorse with JD Vance?� (Washington Post) - “Kamala the Prosecutor� (The Atlantic)
- “Biden Lost His Voice, Then His Power� (Politico)