According to the news source, some of the posts stated, "I am sorry. If you support the Democratic Party, I will not help you" and "The problem is that I know which of you supports the Democratic Party, and I will not help you survive the end of days." read more
George Monbiot: A vote for Donald Trump next week is a vote for Elon Musk. Just as Trump is using Musk, Musk could be using Trump as a springboard to perhaps even greater power than the US president can wield. read more
Susan Glasser: The hate was the thing they were there for; the nastier the nickname, the cruder the slur, the bigger the roar ... read more
A key ally to former President Donald Trump detailed plans to deploy the military in response to domestic unrest, defund the Environmental Protection Agency and put career civil servants "in trauma" in a series of previously unreported speeches that provide a sweeping vision for a second Trump term.
Some participants in a Halloween parade in Westmoreland County are coming under fire for their depiction of Vice President Kamala Harris in a float. read more
God, I hope so:
From Letters from an American:
Yesterday, in Time magazine, Eric Cortellessa explained that the electoral strategy of the Trump campaign was to get men who don't usually vote, particularly young ones, to turn out for Trump. If they could do that, and at the same time hold steady the support of white women, Trump could win the election. So Trump has focused on podcasts followed by young men and on imitating the patterns of professional wrestling performances. . . .heathercoxrichardson.substack.com
Rather than keeping women in his camp, Trump's strategy of reaching out to his base to turn out low-propensity voters, especially young men, has alienated them. That alienation has come on top of the Dobbs v. Jackson Women's Health Organization decision that overturned Roe v. Wade, the 1973 Supreme Court decision that recognized the constitutional right to abortion.
Early voting in Pennsylvania showed that women sent in 56% of the early ballots, compared to 43% for men. Seniors--people who remember a time before Roe v. Wade--also showed a significant split. Although the parties had similar numbers of registrants, nearly 59% of those over 65 voting early were Democrats. That pattern holds across all the battleground states: women's early voting outpaces men's by about 10 points. While those numbers are certainly not definitive--no one knows how these people voted, and much could change over the next few days--the enthusiasm of those two groups was notable....
In Flagstaff, Arizona, today, Democratic presidential candidate and Minnesota governor Tim Walz told a crowd: "I kind of have a feeling that women all across this country, from every walk of life, from either party, are going to send a loud and clear message to Donald Trump next Tuesday, November 5, whether he likes it or not."
Trump on SNL:
2nd appearance
S41.E4
Donald Trump/Sia (2015)
Taran Killam, Donald Trump, and Darrell Hammond during the monologue on November 7, 2015
www.imdb.com
Tanielx.com
@Taniel
Here's what I'd say about why people care about the Selzer poll, besides the mythologizing. In final days of both 2016 & 2020, as polling had Dems in strong shape (well, esp. in 2020), it was the rare sign that something could be amiss in other polling. (1/3)
Extent to which Rust Belt white voters swung to Trump was just not understood before we saw results in 2016, tho Selzer gave a preview. (She also was first to capture IA changed in 2014.) There was this idea in 2020 that had swung back; her poll was clearest cold shower.
But of course: IT'S JUST ONE POLL! It's subject to the same margin of error, can be off in any direction, and in the moment it wasn't clear what they meant.
Same today: IT'S JUST ONE POLL.
But that gets to other thing about Selzer poll: it's clearly uninterested in herding.
BUT ALSO: 2024 polling is so different than 2016 & 2020. Pretty much no pollster shows a snap back in IA & OH. And *that* was the reality check Selzer had offered in the past. So it's just so different this year in terms of what reality check it may offer, even mythologized one.
I follow this data guy for PA polls, who I think is pretty good, and this is his PA data from earlier today:
Joshua Smithley
@blockedfreq
... Pennsylvania - 2024 General Election - Day 21
" 1,777,019 votes cast
" DEM: 990,189 - 82.5% returned
" GOP: 583,791 - 81.6% returned
IND: 203,039 - 72.0% returned
VBM Splits: " 55.7% / " 32.9% / 11.4%
Ballot Edge: "+406,398
" Return Edge: "+0.9
x.com
His vote totals and VBM percentages track pretty closely to the data from your site updated a few hours later:
www.l2-data.com