Oct 21, 2024
SHOCK Report Shows Trump Losing With This Key Voter Block
CNN’s John Berman and Harry Enten broke down new reporting that former President Donald Trump is slipping with non-college white voters.
- 15 minutes
We've seen so many groups this year
moving in Donald Trump's direction.
So you would think his core group,
his base of support
would be doing the same, but in fact,
it's moving a little bit away from him.
CNN's Harry Enten has revealed that Donald
Trump is actually losing some support
[00:00:18]
within one of the most important
demographics in his base.
Now, let's watch Enten describe
or explain who exactly these voters are.
So this is Trump's margin
with non-college white voters.
Unlike most voting blocs,
this group is not moving towards him.
[00:00:35]
It's actually moving slightly away.
So you go back eight years ago we won it
by 33. You go back four years ago.
He won them by 31. Now what we look is we
see that in the latest average of polls.
He's only up by 27. Now, that may not seem
like a lot, but given that we're seeing
[00:00:51]
these double digit gains,
say, among black voters or among
Hispanic voters in some of the polls,
the fact that we're seeing this core group
of supporters actually moving away from
him, not just off of the 2016 baseline,
but the 2020 baseline as well.
[00:01:06]
I think that's
a rather interesting development.
So according to the average of polling,
it indicates that compared to 2016,
Donald Trump has about 6% less support
from non-college educated white voters.
[00:01:25]
And so that's a pretty big deal.
Entin also explained why that small change
could actually make a pretty
big difference or impact on this election.
Let's take a look.
Non-college white voters
make up 40% of the electorate.
That's more than college whites at 29%.
All other groups, voters of color at 28%.
[00:01:44]
So this is something that we've seen
throughout the board, right?
Which is that Donald Trump
is making huge gains with groups that make
up a smaller percentage of the electorate,
while he's losing a little bit.
But these groups
that he's losing a little bit of make up a
much larger portion of the electorate.
But more than that, you know,
we're talking about the US of A,
[00:02:00]
where they make up 40%.
Why don't you go to those key Great Lakes
battleground states Michigan,
Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
They have outsized import
in those Great Lakes battleground states.
Non-college white voters look at this.
They make up the slim majority
of voters at 51%,
way more than college whites at 30%,
way more than all other voters at 16%.
[00:02:21]
So if you're seeing movement
in the Great Lakes battleground states
among non-college whites,
that could be a very big development.
John, are.
We seeing movement in the battleground
states among non-college whites?
Nothing quite like
a leading question, my dear friend.
Yes we are.
We're seeing the same pattern
in the Great Lakes battleground states
[00:02:38]
that we're seeing nationally.
That is small movement
among non-college white voters.
And there's additional potential
good news for the Harris campaign.
There's, for instance, some of the data
that recently came out
[00:02:54]
in the New York Times Siena College poll.
This is from earlier in the month.
They found that Harris is leading
by two points among those 65 and older,
with 49% support to Trump's 47%.
Just last month, the same poll showed
Trump leading seniors by six points,
[00:03:12]
with 52% to Harris's 46%.
Over 70% of voters 65 and older
said they were almost certain
to cast a ballot this November,
according to the Times Siena poll.
And that's important to keep
in mind as well.
[00:03:29]
One of the most loyal, loyal to the
electoral process tend to be older voters.
They turn up to vote.
They're consistent about that.
And so ensuring that you have
additional support from that demographic
could really help Kamala Harris
in this very tight race.
[00:03:47]
Yeah, there's tons of good news,
bad news here.
And given that the last couple of weeks
we've mainly had bad news,
I'll take it that it's mixed.
So let's break it down a little bit.
First of all, the one of the pieces
of bad news is that,
[00:04:02]
a lot of Democrats think that it's okay.
At the end of the day, we'll win
Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin
because those are blue states.
Are they?
Because they were blue states before and
but Trump did win some of them in 2016.
[00:04:19]
So how blue are they?
Why were they blue states in the past?
Because you had a lot of non-college
educated white voters
who worked in manufacturing, and that was
blue collar base of the Democrats,
[00:04:34]
but they're not the base anymore.
So now a lot of them have moved to Trump.
And that's why those three
theoretically blue wall states,
Trump is leading in all three right now.
So they might be small leads.
It's too close to call. But they are.
[00:04:50]
But he is slightly leading, so they're not
as blue as you think they are.
Exactly. For that reason.
Now, the great news though
is he's slipping in that category.
That is very unexpected and great news.
Okay.
And the fact that he's losing now
among senior citizens who vote the most 65
[00:05:08]
and above, That's a bit shocking
and great news because that's a category
that Republicans normally win.
But obviously they're concerned.
My guess is that they're and my guess
is based on the polling information that
we are seeing, is that they're concerned
about this 2020 election madness.
[00:05:26]
And they're they're old school Americans.
And as much as some of them
have drifted to Trump for,
different reasons and, and, and being
frustrated with the Democratic Party,
when they hear somebody talking
about terminating the Constitution,
it makes them uncomfortable.
Yeah, totally.
And when they hear about this fake elector
scheme and how he was going to replace
[00:05:45]
the real electors with his
fraudulent electors and pretend he won,
that makes them uncomfortable.
And so that's the thing
that the Democrats,
to their credit, have focused on.
And that's the thing I've focused on.
And I agree with Democratic leaders
on that strategy, because it's a kind
[00:06:03]
of a big deal if you want to terminate
the Constitution and cheat and steal
an election, that's not a little thing.
That's a gigantic thing.
So I have a question for you
because as we all know, you know,
the Democratic Party overall,
not just in this presidential election,
[00:06:18]
but they have been kind of beating
the drums in regard to Donald Trump
wanting to be a dictator,
how he's a threat to our democracy.
But I have also noticed
an interesting, contradictory, like pivot
with the Harris Wallace campaign
and their messaging on Trump,
[00:06:34]
because now they're trying to paint him
as someone who's old, exhausted, you know,
he's skipping out on various interviews,
like the interview with 60 minutes.
Oh, he can't do it
because he doesn't have the stamina.
Oh, he's got dementia.
[00:06:51]
And so I don't know if they're helping
their cause by pivoting to that messaging,
because I see those two messages
as really conflicting with one another.
- But what are your thoughts?
- That's interesting.
I'm not sure that a lot of people
are going to make the connection,
that they're conflicting.
They're trying to get some people with,
you know,
[00:07:08]
we're worried about his mental stability
and dementia, which I agree with.
And then we're worried about him
being able to pull off some sort of coup
like he tried last time.
And remember, he doesn't.
You don't need Trump to do it.
It's not like Trump came up with the idea.
Navarro and Eastman and Bannon and those
[00:07:25]
guys came up with the idea to do the fake
electors instead of the real electors,
when the real electors wouldn't go along
with this plot to steal the election.
So you don't need Trump to be competent.
And he never was.
So I'm not overly worried about that.
Now, guys, there are there is more
bad news, but there's one piece of news
[00:07:41]
that I think will
pretty much determine the election.
We'll see if I'm right.
So on the bad news, yeah,
they the American people are
in a draconian mood on immigration.
So sometimes people on the left
try to wish things like this away.
But when you see the polling,
you have to be cognizant of it
[00:07:58]
and figure out how to adjust,
because deporting people is now popular.
Sending the army and the military
to the border is now very popular.
And so we can find a way to to try
to defeat those policy goals.
But we have to be aware of it.
[00:08:13]
If we're trying to win an election, it
doesn't mean you go towards that, right?
But it means you find a way around that.
And so the other thing that's
bad is drill, baby drill.
So I hate it.
It's Trump saying that the oil companies,
you could do whatever you want
as long as you give me a donation.
But it works with the American people
because they're worried about gas prices.
[00:08:31]
So that's working, right?
So that's the bad news.
We'll get to more details in a second.
But to me, the good news is
they want to change candidate.
And at least for now by a little bit,
they think Kamala Harris
is the change candidate.
[00:08:46]
Woo. That's huge.
If she can keep that to the end
that might push her over the top
because they want a change.
People are not happy
with how things are today.
Right.
So but there's one critical number in here
that Anna's going to read you guys.
And I'm going to come back
and focus on that I think
[00:09:02]
could make all the difference.
So NBC news did their own survey
and they didn't ask about either party.
They wanted
to specifically ask about issues.
What issues are they prioritizing
and factoring into their decision making
[00:09:17]
when it comes to this election.
And the results are actually fascinating.
And it kind of speaks
to what Jake was referring to
in regard to drilling and immigration.
So let's take a look at this graph.
So 67% are more likely to support
a candidate that would expand domestic oil
[00:09:35]
and natural gas production. 64% who
participated in this survey
are more likely to support a candidate
that would institute
a federal child tax credit of $6,
000.
And so let's talk about that a little bit,
because both parties,
[00:09:52]
both candidates in this case
have proposed a child tax credit.
And former President
Donald Trump's campaign is proposing
a $5,000 per child yearly tax credit.
Kamala Harris's plan is,
in my opinion, strange.
[00:10:08]
I don't know why she went with this, but
she is apparently proposing a credit of up
to $3,600 per child with a bump to $6,000,
but only for children up to one year old.
Yeah, I don't know why
that delineation exists.
I'm sure some bureaucrat
came up with it because.
[00:10:25]
Get rid of the bureaucrats, right?
But but bottom line is there's one party
that has shown that they are in favor
of the child tax credit,
and another one that hasn't.
And so the Democrats did pass
the child tax credit for one year.
Now, if you watch The Young Turks,
we were livid that they didn't continue it
[00:10:44]
because it was a incredibly popular,
as you're seeing in the numbers here,
and be incredibly effective.
It cut child poverty rates by half.
It was a relatively inexpensive way
of making sure that kids in America
[00:10:59]
don't go hungry at night.
It was a great program.
That is why we say go populist,
go help the average American politics.
Isn't that complicated? Yeah, right.
You give them a child tax credit,
they like it.
I know.
But it is complicated
when the desires of voters
[00:11:17]
conflict with the desires of donors.
And that is, look, that is the reason
why the Democratic Party is finding itself
in a difficult position as it pertains
to beating someone like Donald Trump,
because they know what works.
They know what's popular. Okay.
The party of FDR used to have very little
problems in terms of beating a Republican
[00:11:36]
candidate with an economic populist
message, because the Democratic Party
used to consist of economic populists.
But in the age of unlimited
campaign donations to super PACs.
Well, let's keep it real.
The Democrats got high off that money.
[00:11:51]
They don't want to give that money up.
Kamala Harris has raised $1 billion
in this election cycle, and everyone
is celebrating it like it's this
big accomplishment, a big achievement.
But remember that money from donors
conflicts with
what the Democratic voters want.
[00:12:06]
So if you are frustrated
as a Democratic voter
for consistently getting out the vote,
doing your job, doing what's necessary
to canvass for the Democratic candidate,
ensuring that that individual wins,
but you're frustrated because
they don't keep their side of the deal.
There is a very real,
very real reason for that.
[00:12:24]
And I don't know what Democrats
are going to do moving forward.
But that conflict is growing bigger
and bigger and bigger.
And they can't just lean
into identity politics or shaming
in order to win elections anymore.
People are getting sick of that.
They want to see results.
So that leads us to, I think,
the most important topic
[00:12:41]
that could decide this election.
But just to complete my thought.
Trump is not going to do
a child tax credit.
It's a total lie.
He never went anywhere near
that direction in his first term.
The Republicans are the ones
who voted it down after the first year
of the child tax credit.
The Republicans will only
help the rich and corporations.
[00:12:58]
Every populist idea they have
is totally fraudulent.
They've never done it.
They've never taken one step
in that direction.
Now let's get to the to the one
that I'm referring to.
I'm quoting NBC news here. 61% say
they are more likely to back a candidate,
[00:13:15]
quote, who wants to help control inflation
by taxing large corporations
that are making record profits.
Now, when, Kamala Harris first came out,
she said, I'm going to go after those
[00:13:30]
corporations making record profits.
If they're doing price gouging,
I'm going to go after them.
Boom!
She skyrockets in the polling
goes from Biden being eight
down to her being five up nationally.
Then she turns around and says,
Mark Cuban, to do every interview,
[00:13:45]
telling everybody, don't worry,
I'm not doing any of that big business.
I support big business
more than Joe Biden.
I support big business
more than anyone else.
Here's 90 corporate CEOs
who wrote a letter saying I'm the biggest
big business friendly person that she is.
Boom! The polling goes nosedive down.
[00:14:01]
She went from five up,
which is in fact she got to six up,
which is enough to win and to win
because you have to be at least four and a
half points up to win in a nationally to
win the election in the Electoral College.
Now she's back to tied at the national
level and losing in every swing state.
The answer is obvious.
The American people are telling you.
[00:14:19]
Remember, it's not 61 versus 39.
The opposite side is actually tiny.
There's a whole bunch of undecideds.
Almost no one is in favor of big business
if they're making record profits.
The American people are saying, get them
under control so they stop inflation.
[00:14:37]
She had it right in the beginning.
That's why we praised her.
And she turned around.
And she's losing because she went to go
help the donors instead of the voters.
It's not that complicated.
But you can't talk sense
to Democratic leaders.
- All they see is cash.
- They're like, we raised the most money.
[00:14:54]
Yeah, but did you win the election?
Remember the means and the ends.
Those are supposed to get you
to the end of winning the election.
If it costs you the election,
what the hell was the point of raising
$1 billion from your corporate friends?
Hey, thanks for watching the video.
[00:15:09]
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