New national polling shows that Vermont Senator Bernie
Sanders is now the undisputed frontrunner in the Democratic national primary. A
spate of new polls show that Sanders now has approximately 30 percent of support
from national Democrats with Joe Biden, Michael Bloomberg, and Elizabeth Warren
vying for second place.
Three polls released over the past two days confirm that
Sanders now enjoys a double-digit lead over his nearest rivals. Here are the results
of those polls:
ABC
News/Washington Post conducted Feb. 14-17 with 408 registered voters:
Sanders – 32
Biden – 16
Bloomberg – 14
Warren – 12
All others are under 10 percent.
Emerson
College conducted Feb. 16-18 with 573 likely voters:
Sanders – 29
Biden – 22
Bloomberg – 14
Warren – 12
All others are under 10 percent.
Sanders – 27
Biden – 15
Bloomberg – 14
Warren – 14
Buttigieg -13
All others are under 10 percent.
The polling undisputedly shows that Bernie Sanders is moving
away from Joe Biden. Sanders has not only climbed in the polls after his strong
showing in Iowa and his victory in New Hampshire, but Biden has also dropped
off sharply.
But it isn’t only Sanders - and perhaps it isn’t even
predominantly Sanders – who has benefitted from Biden’s misfortune. A look at
the Real
Clear Politics polling average graph shows that Biden’s decline mirrors
Bloomberg’s rise almost perfectly. It appears that Bloomberg is drawing many of
the moderate Democrats who were once Biden supporters.
However, as with the Electoral College, the nuts and bolts
of the delegate race are at the state level. As
I pointed out last week, there is a dearth of polling in Nevada, South
Carolina, and the Super Tuesday states so there is room for surprises. What
polling there is shows a muddled race. Some various recent state polls show
Sanders up by 19
points in Nevada and somewhere between four
and 18
points in California. Meanwhile, the most recent South Carolina polling
shows Joe Biden with a narrowing lead, last reported at eight
points. In most cases, Bloomberg and Biden are competing for second place.
Biden’s concern for his South Carolina firewall is evident
in the fact that his campaign is deploying John Kerry, famously described by
Wall St. Journal columnist James Taranto as “the haughty, French-looking
Massachusetts Democrat, who by the way served in Vietnam,” to rally his forces in
the Palmetto State. The
State reports that the 2004 presidential nominee will join a bus tour with
Biden’s surrogates as it swings through the state.
I wrote several times earlier this year that the Democratic
primary might follow the model of the 2016 Republican race in which the moderate
candidates split the vote, allowing the radical outsider to win with a
plurality. Only this year, I surmised, the effect might be the reverse with
progressive radicals splitting the vote and allowing the moderate Biden to
cruise to victory. Michael Bloomberg’s late entry into the race changed all
that.
Bloomberg’s ad blitz paired with Biden’s underwhelming performance
seems to have established the New Yorker as a spoiler. With Bloomberg drawing from
Biden’s support, both of the moderates are weaker than Bernie Sanders, but
their combined shares of support are larger than Sanders’ share in most cases. If
both candidates stay in the race, Bernie seems likely to come out on top.
That doesn’t necessarily mean that Bernie will win, however.
There seems to be a growing chance that none of the candidates will be able to
claim the nomination outright, leading to a brokered
convention in which a deal has to be struck to determine a nominee. The FiveThirtyEight
model recently put the chances of a brokered convention at about 25 percent.
Even if Bernie emerges with a plurality of delegates, he may
be denied the nomination in a brokered convention. The fail-safe scenario in
which moderate Democrats unite to prevent a Bernie nomination could give the
Democrats a more electable candidate, but it could also split the party. Either
scenario could make it difficult for Democrats to beat Donald Trump.
The next big tells will be South Carolina and Super Tuesday.
If Bernie strongly outperforms Biden and Bloomberg, he could be unstoppable on
the way to the nomination. If Biden’s Southern firewall holds, it may be a
close three-way race to the convention.
Tune in next week to see what other changes happen in this topsy-turvy
race.
Originally published on The
Resurgent
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