The problem for Sanders is that primaries are about being loved, not just liked.
The belief that Biden has a better chance of beating Trump is arguably the reason he's ahead right now in the Democratic race for president. As the race for the 2020 Presidential campaign heats up, Fox News will be tracking every candidate announcement. 'Likely voters' here combines the 'likely voter' and 'definite voter' categories in the linked poll. All of these were big drops from October, when Buttigieg was at +6 points, Biden was at +2 points, Sanders was at +2 points and Warren was at -3 points.
Biden is leading with Sanders usually polling in second place. The two former Democratic candidates for president also top the list among all registered voters in the July 20-21 poll.
Open-ended polls are included and marked with an asterisk (*), but closed-ended versions of such polls are listed where possible. To put this another way, Buttigieg is getting less of the nonwhite vote than Bloomberg (5%). So, say another candidate had a difference of -10 (0% Hispanic supporters), we'd show our original candidate at +5 halfway up a scale that runs to +10, the absolute value of the largest score.There are several more ways we can describe that +5 score. The polls included are among Democrats or Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, and do not include Republican-leaning independents. As of June 8, 2020,Candidates who were major candidates who withdrew or suspended their campaigns after the Candidates withdrew too late to remove their names from several state ballots and remained on at least two:Candidates who were major candidates who withdrew or suspended their campaigns before the 2020 Democratic primary elections began and are not on the ballot for the presidential primaries anywhere. It gives him a chance to repeat what he did in 2016.
While you wouldn't expect a Democrat to do well with Republican voters, Biden comes in at -63 points and Sanders comes in with -68 points. That is, Buttigieg has become better known over the last few months among nonwhites. Among potential Democratic primary voters who hold a favorable view of Sanders, it's Biden 26% to Sanders' 25% for their choice. Major candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries have either: (a) served as vice president, a member of the cabinet, a U.S. senator, a U.S. representative, or a governor, (b) been included in a minimum of five independent national polls, or (c) received substantial media coverage. His problem, as alluded to last post, is that Democrats like Sanders more than Biden.The question for Biden is whether he can hold on to the Democratic voters who currently don't hold a favorable view of him.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders comes in at 20%, which is a little bit better than the 18% he’s averaged since September. Bloomberg’s standing comes after he’s spent One other notable finding from the horserace include New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker at 3% (along with Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and entrepreneur Andrew Yang). Many voters like multiple candidates.
Half the electorate (50%) say they are extremely enthusiastic about voting in next year's presidential election. He's at just 2% with nonwhites in this poll. All General Election Polls.
South Bend, Indiana, Mayor Pete Buttigieg is at 8% and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg is at 5%. primary voters * proportion of Dem. All YouGov/Economist polls' favourability ratings after this date are calculated with the "Democratic Primary Voter" subsample. Warren also struggles mightily with Republican and Republican-leaning independents. I'm not sure how you exactly build a case for Warren.
The problem for Sanders is that primaries are about being loved, not just liked.
The belief that Biden has a better chance of beating Trump is arguably the reason he's ahead right now in the Democratic race for president. As the race for the 2020 Presidential campaign heats up, Fox News will be tracking every candidate announcement. 'Likely voters' here combines the 'likely voter' and 'definite voter' categories in the linked poll. All of these were big drops from October, when Buttigieg was at +6 points, Biden was at +2 points, Sanders was at +2 points and Warren was at -3 points.
Biden is leading with Sanders usually polling in second place. The two former Democratic candidates for president also top the list among all registered voters in the July 20-21 poll.
Open-ended polls are included and marked with an asterisk (*), but closed-ended versions of such polls are listed where possible. To put this another way, Buttigieg is getting less of the nonwhite vote than Bloomberg (5%). So, say another candidate had a difference of -10 (0% Hispanic supporters), we'd show our original candidate at +5 halfway up a scale that runs to +10, the absolute value of the largest score.There are several more ways we can describe that +5 score. The polls included are among Democrats or Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents, and do not include Republican-leaning independents. As of June 8, 2020,Candidates who were major candidates who withdrew or suspended their campaigns after the Candidates withdrew too late to remove their names from several state ballots and remained on at least two:Candidates who were major candidates who withdrew or suspended their campaigns before the 2020 Democratic primary elections began and are not on the ballot for the presidential primaries anywhere. It gives him a chance to repeat what he did in 2016.
While you wouldn't expect a Democrat to do well with Republican voters, Biden comes in at -63 points and Sanders comes in with -68 points. That is, Buttigieg has become better known over the last few months among nonwhites. Among potential Democratic primary voters who hold a favorable view of Sanders, it's Biden 26% to Sanders' 25% for their choice. Major candidates in the 2020 Democratic presidential primaries have either: (a) served as vice president, a member of the cabinet, a U.S. senator, a U.S. representative, or a governor, (b) been included in a minimum of five independent national polls, or (c) received substantial media coverage. His problem, as alluded to last post, is that Democrats like Sanders more than Biden.The question for Biden is whether he can hold on to the Democratic voters who currently don't hold a favorable view of him.
Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders comes in at 20%, which is a little bit better than the 18% he’s averaged since September. Bloomberg’s standing comes after he’s spent One other notable finding from the horserace include New Jersey Sen. Cory Booker at 3% (along with Minnesota Sen. Amy Klobuchar and entrepreneur Andrew Yang). Many voters like multiple candidates.
(It's often used in medicine to measure clinical outcomes between different treatment groups.)