Perhaps you have some special insight which allows you to be confident of a VP Harris victory, but from this side of the pond it looks uncomfortably like a toss up.
I'll share what I have. tl;dr - the polls are kinda sus, but there's no way of telling exactly until the only poll that counts on Nov 5th.
If you read one meta-article about polling, make it this one:
We are less than two weeks out from the 2024 presidential election, and it’s time to take stock of the race. As regular readers of Defector are certainly aware, I have spent the last few months using my proprietary prediction model, which was first created to project Tom Brady’s weekly levels of...
defector.com
It's only half joking. Thing is, no one is calling it a toss-up. It
could be a toss up,
or a landslide either way. They're not saying. They don't know.
How accurate will the polls of the 2024 presidential election be?
abcnews.go.com
Whatever happens,
whoever wins, the pollsters are going to claim they predicted it because almost every possible result is within reaching distance of where they've been all race.
And they've been unusually steady in that middle of the road, enough so that Nate Silver thinks they're crap. Basically the same thing that happened in 2016, only now everyone is smoothing it into a horse race so whatever happens they can't get called out for being wrong like in 2016.
“I kind of trust pollsters less,” said Silver about election forecasts, alleging that pollsters are putting their “finger on the scale.”
www.thedailybeast.com
(although note he ends with "but then who knows, maybe it is a tossup, nobody get mad at me if I'm wrong")
There's at least one minor data house trying to make a name for themselves by forecasting a Harris blowout:
app.vantagedatahouse.com
Whether you agree or not it's an interesting read. This is basically a pitch for their services, the kind of data analysis campaigns want to do internally. Far more useful than "who u vote for?" Their argument is based on correlations with senate race polling, which is much more favorable for Democrats. They also make a very compelling point about Mark Robinson, the Black Nazi in North Carolina:
One particularly confusing case is in North Carolina where Lt. Governor Mark Robinson’s disastrous gubernatorial campaign is sinking every race on the ticket. Robinson is trailing by 22 points overall and a staggering 41 points among women. Yet, Trump is leading by 0.4-1.2 in the averages. It’s hard to imagine a Republican losing by 41 points among women while Trump is supposedly running a close race. Even without the gender gap, the idea that Robinson is down 22 points while Trump is ahead defies logic. This would be a 23% split ticket margin, which would be astonishing.
There's other more subjective takes about vibes, enthusiasm, leaked reports of internal polling, but if vibes and enthusiasm were enough to sway you the Harris campaign already has all you'd need there. We'll see on Tuesday. Either way you can't get mad at me.
