Hillary Clinton enters the final weekend of this historic
presidential campaign with a small-but-real lead over Donald Trump — nationally
and in enough key states to be elected president.
Polls show clear gains for Trump over the past few weeks,
though there are some inconclusive suggestions in the data that the
Republican’s momentum may have been arrested this week, with the bombshell
letter from FBI Director James Comey farther in the rear-view mirror.
Clinton’s lead isn’t secure. There is ample precedent for
the polls to be off the mark by a sufficient margin for Trump to win the
national popular vote. And despite the conventional wisdom that Clinton has an
Electoral College advantage, Trump’s rise in the polls has exposed the cracks
in that firewall.
Here are five numbers that underscore Clinton’s lead — and
its fragility:
Two national polls released Friday night offer similar
overall results: A Fox News poll shows Clinton leading Trump by 2 percentage
points, while the latest ABC News/Washington Post tracking poll, conducted over
roughly the same time frame, shows Clinton ahead by 4 points.
But beneath the topline numbers, there are key differences
in the two surveys.
The ABC News/Washington Post poll — the most recent rolling
average is composed of interviews conducted Monday through Thursday — indicates
enthusiasm for Clinton, which tapered off after Comey’s letter last week, has
rebounded.
A 52-percent majority of Clinton supporters now say they are
“very enthusiastic” about voting for her, equal to the 51 percent of Trump
supporters “very enthusiastic” about him.
Enthusiasm for Trump has been relatively stable, ranging
between 49 percent and 53 percent over the two weeks of the tracking poll.
But enthusiasm for Clinton has been more tumultuous. Over
the first four nights, 49 percent of Clinton voters were “very enthusiastic,”
but that dipped to the mid 40s after Comey’s letter.
The recovery was abrupt. In the four nights previous to the
poll’s release — Sunday through Wednesday — Clinton’s “very enthusiastic” share
was 47 percent. But dropping Sunday’s interviews and adding Thursday’s
increased that figure 5 points.
The Fox News poll, however, holds a nugget that suggests
there is an enthusiasm gap favoring the GOP nominee. More Trump voters (71
percent) say they “strongly support” their choice than Clinton voters (65
percent).
Similarly, more Trump supporters say they are “extremely
interested” in the election (63 percent) than Clinton supporters (54 percent).
But, as Democrats will note, the final Fox News poll of the
2012 election showed Mitt Romney’s supporters more interested in the election,
and more likely to say it was really important who won.
Comey’s letter gave Trump’s numbers a short-term jolt, but
the real uptick in his poll numbers came in the week leading up to it.
-politico

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