Opinion

Watch 2016 numbers for 2020 polls

By Stuart Rothenberg
CQ-Roll Call (TNS)

With the convention season ending and the sprint to November about to begin, it might be useful to look once again at the 2016 presidential exit poll. The survey offers a window into that year’s electorate and will allow us to compare where we are now and where we are headed over the next two months.

First, a couple of caveats. The exit poll is a poll, which means it has a margin of error. Don’t treat the numbers as if they were given to Moses on Mount Sinai.

Second, the exit poll is a national survey, which is why it is called a “national” exit poll. As we all know, electors, chosen by each state, pick the president, so a national exit poll is merely a way to measure national public sentiment.

As you watch the presidential contest and hear about the latest poll, keep in mind what happened in 2016 _ how groups turned out and how they voted. Hillary Clinton won the popular vote by 2.1 points four years ago, according to tallies of votes cast. Is Trump doing better or worse than he did four years ago?

White voters

White voters went for Donald Trump by 20 points four years ago, 57% to 37%. They also accounted for 71% of exit poll respondents. So if the electorate is less white than it was four years ago, or if Trump falls well below his 20-point margin among whites, the president is in deep trouble.

Sure, he could improve his showing among Blacks (8% of whom backed him in 2016, according to the exit poll), Latinos (28%) or Asian Americans (27%). But that is unlikely. Whites remain his base, and he cannot afford significant defections.

In a June 7, 2016, article for The Washington Post, I noted that two national surveys offered vastly different views on the question.

A May 16-19, 2016, ABC News/Washington Post survey found Trump ahead of Clinton by 2 points, primarily because he led her by 24 points (57% to 33%) among whites. A May 13-17, 2016, CBS News/New York Times poll showed Clinton leading by 6 points, in part because Trump held a narrower 12-point lead (50% to 38%) among whites.

So if you can figure out the percentage of whites in the electorate and get Trump’s margin with that group correctly, you probably know the outcome of the 2020 election.

Many analysts are looking at smaller demographic categories, such as white women with a college degree or white men without a college degree, which could offer interesting insights into the electorate. But smaller subsamples can be tricky.

College graduates

According to the 2016 national exit poll, half of respondents were college graduates and half were not. Clinton won college graduates by 10 points, 52% to 42%, while Trump won voters without a college degree by 7 points, 51% to 44%.

Any improvement in Biden’s performance among college graduates should raise alarms in the Trump campaign. On the other hand, an electorate with a much larger percentage of non-college graduates would make Democrats nervous.

White evangelicals

White evangelicals have been among the president’s strongest supporters. They accounted for 26% of exit poll voters in 2016, and Trump carried them by a stunning 64 points — 80% to 16%.

Trump should again carry the group overwhelmingly, but any defections to Biden will come right out of the GOP/Trump base.

Suburban/rural/urban

Suburban voters constituted almost half of the 2016 exit poll respondents (49%), and the category is widely viewed as an important swing group. Trump won suburban voters by only 4 points in 2016, 49% to 45%, and suburban voters split evenly (at 49% each) in the 2018 midterm exit poll. That change undoubtedly helped Democrats make significant gains in the House.
Clinton won urban voters 60% to 34% in 2016, but two years later, the exit poll showed Democrats improving on that
performance by winning 65% of urban voters.

And while Trump carried rural voters handily in 2016 (61% to 34%), the GOP margin slipped to 56% to 42% in 2018.
How the suburbs vote — and whether urban or rural voters are changing their votes — should tell us something important about this November’s elections.

You will see lots of polls with ballot tests and subsamples over the next two months. Keep your eye on the quality national polls and the demographic categories that can tell you how voting groups have changed (if they have changed at all) since 2016.