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Trump’s Electoral College Edge Could Grow in 2020, Rewarding Polarizing Campaign 
Re-election looks plausible even with a bigger loss in the national popular vote.

By Nate Cohn
July 19, 2019
President Trump’s approval ratings are under water in national polls. His position for re-election, on the other hand, might not be quite so bleak.
 His  advantage in the Electoral College, relative to the national popular  vote, may be even larger than it was in 2016, according to an Upshot  analysis of election results and polling data. 
That  persistent edge leaves him closer to re-election than one would think  based on national polls, and it might blunt any electoral cost of  actions like his recent tweets attacking four minority congresswomen.
For  now, the mostly white working-class Rust Belt states, decisive in the  2016 election, remain at the center of the electoral map, based on our  estimates.  The Democrats have few obviously promising alternative paths  to win without these battleground states. The president’s approval  ratings remain higher in the Sun Belt battlegrounds than in the Rust  Belt, despite Democratic hopes of a breakthrough.
The  president’s views on immigration and trade play relatively well in the  Northern battlegrounds, including among the pivotal Obama-Trump voters. 
There are signs that some of these voters have soured on  his presidency, based on recent polling. There is also reason to think  that white working-class voters who supported Mr. Trump were relatively  likely to stay home in last November’s midterm elections.
 A  strategy rooted in racial polarization could at once energize parts of  the president’s base and rebuild support among wavering white  working-class voters. Many of these voters backed Mr. Trump in the first  place in part because of his views on hot-button issues, including on  immigration and race.
Alone,  the president’s relative advantage in the Electoral College does not  necessarily make him a favorite to win. His approval rating is well  beneath 50 percent in states worth more than 270 electoral votes, including in the Northern battleground states that decided the 2016 election. 
And  just because racial polarization could work to the president’s  advantage in general doesn’t mean that his particular tactics will prove  effective. The president’s campaign rally on Wednesday night seemed, for a time, to go too far even for him: on Thursday he disavowed the “send her back” chants that supporters directed toward a  congresswoman who immigrated to the United States as a refugee. (By Friday, he was declining to condemn the chants.) 
But  Mr. Trump’s approval rating has been stable even after seemingly big  missteps. And if it improves by a modest amount — not unusual for  incumbents with a strong economy — he could have a distinct chance to  win re-election while losing the popular vote by more than he did in  2016, when he lost it by 2.1 percentage points. 
The president’s relative advantage in the Electoral College could grow even further  in a high-turnout election, which could pad Democratic margins  nationwide while doing little to help them in the Northern battleground  states. 
 It is even possible that Mr. Trump could win while losing the national vote by as much as five percentage points.
The state of the Electoral College, 2018
The  best available evidence on the president’s standing by state comes from  the large 2018 election surveys. Their quality is generally high, and  unlike most surveys, they have been adjusted to match actual election  results, ironing out many potential biases of pre-election polls.  Although these surveys are nearly nine months old, the stability of the  president’s overall approval ratings means, for our purposes, that they  remain a decent measure of the distribution of his support.
Taken  together, the president’s approval rating among midterm voters stood at  about 45.5 percent, excluding the voters who did not express an opinion  (for comparability, measures of the president’s approval will exclude  voters without an opinion). 
By  state, the president’s approval rating was beneath 50 percent in states  worth 310 electoral votes: the states carried by Hillary Clinton, along  with Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin, Iowa, Arizona and North  Carolina. This is not exactly good news for the president, but not as  bad as it typically would be given an approval rating of 45.5 percent. John McCain, for instance, lost states worth 365 electoral votes in 2008 while winning 45.7 percent of the vote. 
The  most important measure of the president’s strength in the Electoral  College, relative to the national vote, is the difference between the  national vote and the “tipping-point state” — the state most likely to push a candidate over the Electoral College threshold. 
Wisconsin  was the tipping-point state in 2016, and it seems to hold that  distinction now, at least based on the president’s approval rating among  2018 midterm voters. 
Over all, the  president’s approval rating was 47.1 percent in Wisconsin, above his  45.5 percent nationwide. This implies that the president’s advantage in  the Electoral College, at least by his approval rating, is fairly  similar to what it was in 2016. 
A  closer look at the underlying evidence suggests there’s reason to think  the president’s ratings could be higher than estimated in the state. The  estimates are based on four measures of the president’s standing, and  there is one outlier: the Votecast survey, which places the president’s  net approval rating at minus 13, or 43.6 percent approval. The other  three are in close agreement, placing the president’s rating between 47  percent and 48 percent.
There is an  additional piece of evidence, unique to Wisconsin, that’s consistent  with a stronger position for the president: the Marquette University  poll, which gave Mr. Trump a minus 5 net approval among likely voters in  its final poll before the midterms. Over the longer run, the president  has averaged a minus 5 net approval among registered voters (not midterm  voters) in Marquette polls since October.
In  other words, most measures suggest that the president’s rating is  higher than 47.1 percent in Wisconsin. If you excluded the Votecast data  and added the final Marquette poll, the president’s approval rating  would rise to 47.6 percent — or a net 4.2 points higher than his  nationwide approval. 
It  is important to emphasize that it is impossible to nail down the  president’s standing in Wisconsin, or any state, with precision. But  Wisconsin is the pivotal state in this analysis, and a one-point  difference there could potentially be decisive.
One reason that such a small swing in Wisconsin could be so important is that the Democrats do not have an obviously promising alternative if Wisconsin drifts to the right.
In  2016, Florida was that obviously promising alternative: It voted for  Mr. Trump by 1.2 percentage points, compared with his 0.8-point victory  in Wisconsin. 
But all of the measures  indicate that Florida has shifted to the right of the nation since  2016, at least among 2018 midterm voters. The president’s approval  rating in Florida was essentially even — and by our measure, slightly  positive. Republicans narrowly won the Florida fights for Senate and governor, and also the statewide U.S. House vote.
The  next tier of Democratic opportunities doesn’t provide an easy backstop  to Democratic weakness in Wisconsin either. There’s Arizona, where  Democrats had a good midterm cycle,  but where the president’s approval rating is plainly stronger than it  is nationwide or in Wisconsin. The same is true of Iowa or North  Carolina, though the president’s standing in those states is somewhat more uncertain in the absence of an exit poll or a high-profile statewide result. 
 In  the end, these states, particularly Arizona, could prove to be a better  opportunity for Democrats than Wisconsin. But at least based on this  evidence, it would probably be more a reflection of Democratic weakness  in Wisconsin than strength elsewhere.
 
Milwaukee and Miami-Dade
In  both Wisconsin and Florida, the president’s resilience seems grounded  in two regions: the Milwaukee area and Miami-Dade County.
The  president’s average approval rating in the Milwaukee media market  stands at 48 percent — virtually unchanged from what it was in 2016, in a  compilation of Marquette University polls since October. His approval  has declined in the rest of the state, according to both the Marquette  data and the exit polls, which also showed the president holding firm in  the Milwaukee area. A similar pattern has showed up in statewide  election results, where Republicans have tended to run strongly in the  area. 
The  president’s approval rating in Miami-Dade may even be better than his  standing there in 2016, based on three Times/Siena surveys of two  districts there, Florida’s 26th and 27th. These polls were also highly  accurate, coming within a point of the election results. On average, the  president’s approval rating stood at 45.7 percent among the likely  electorate in the two districts— well above his 40.8 percent share of the major-party vote there in the 2016 presidential election.
At  first glance, these regions might seem to have little in common. But in  terms of politics, their idiosyncrasies have played out in similar  ways.
Both are regions where the  Republicans do better than demographics would lead you to expect.  Milwaukee is one of the last Northern metropolitan areas where  Republicans still rule the suburbs; Miami-Dade is one of the few places  where Republicans win Hispanics, in this case Cuban voters.
Both  areas were, or still are, represented by major establishment figures in  Republican politics: Scott Walker, Paul Ryan, Jeb Bush and Marco Rubio.  Many fought hard against Mr. Trump in the primary. These areas were  some of Mr. Trump’s weakest of the primary season — he won 22 percent in  the primaries in Miami-Dade and in Waukesha, Wis. 
Hillary Clinton improved over Barack Obama in both areas in 2016. 
 The president’s apparent resilience or recovery in these regions  contrasts with what has happened elsewhere in the country. But it is  possible that the real anomaly was his weakness in 2016, which was  perhaps in part because of the president’s hostility to his prominent  skeptics in these areas. The Republican establishment is now unified, if  belatedly, behind the president; perhaps these voters have unified  behind him as well.
The consequences of higher turnout
Many assume that the huge turnout expected in 2020 will benefit Democrats, but it’s not so straightforward.  It could conceivably work to the advantage of either party, and either  way, higher turnout could widen the gap between the Electoral College  and the popular vote.
That’s because  the major Democratic opportunity — to mobilize nonwhite and young voters  on the periphery of politics — would disproportionately help Democrats  in diverse, often noncompetitive states. 
The  major Republican opportunity — to mobilize less educated white voters,  particularly those who voted in 2016 but sat out 2018 — would  disproportionately help them in white, working-class areas over-represented in the Northern battleground states.
If  everyone who was eligible to vote turned up at the polls, the gap  between the Sun Belt and Rust Belt would close. Texas, astonishingly,  would emerge as the tipping-point state. Wisconsin and Pennsylvania, by  contrast, would barely budge.
Of course, a full-turnout election is not going to happen. In recent months, analysts have speculated about a 70 percent turnout among eligible voters, up from 60 percent in 2016.
In  this kind of high-turnout presidential election, by our estimates, the  tipping-point state would drift to the right as people who voted in 2016  but not in 2018 return to the electorate and nudge states like  Pennsylvania and Wisconsin toward the president. At the same time, the  Sun Belt would drift left. Arizona could overtake Wisconsin as the  tipping-point state. But even in this hypothetical high-turnout  election, the president’s approval rating in Arizona would be higher  than it was in 2018 in Wisconsin. It becomes harder for the Democrats to  win the presidency. 
In  such an election, the tipping-point state could have a net approval  rating that is five points higher than the president’s national net  approval rating, potentially allowing the president to win re-election  while losing the popular vote by a wide margin. 
2018 isn’t destiny
 
This  analysis mainly covers the opportunities available to both parties; we  can’t know which side will take better advantage of them. And it’s  important to emphasize that the kind of slight difference in measuring  Wisconsin is beyond our ability to discern with great confidence, even  using high-quality, calibrated data. 
All  of this is based on the president’s approval rating — well ahead of the  election. Most presidents manage to improve their approval rating  between this point and the election, particularly with a strong economy.  But unforeseen events could also hurt his approval rating; it is even imaginable that the president could go too far on immigration for some of his more moderate supporters. 
If  the president’s ratings improve, the crucial question will be where.  The answer is likely to be influenced by the contrast he can draw with  his still-undetermined opponent. 
Democrats could nominate a candidate who tries to win the presidency by mobilizing a new, diverse coalition  with relative strength in Sun Belt states, while making little or no  effort to secure the support of the white working-class voters with  reservations about the president.
The Democrats could certainly win in the Sun Belt states, even in Texas. Perhaps this kind of Democrat could generate such a favorable turnout that it helps the party even in relatively white states.
But  it’s also a strategy that would tend to increase the risk of a wide gap  between the Electoral College and the national vote. It’s also hard to  see how it would be the easier way forward for Democrats, at least as  long as the president’s approval rating in the Rust Belt remains so much  lower than in the Sun Belt states. 
Of  course, the campaign season has barely begun. The election could wind  up being a simple referendum on the president, and his approval ratings  suggest he could lose, perhaps even decisively. But his relative advantage in the Electoral College could ensure his political survival.
Nate  Cohn is a domestic correspondent for The Upshot. He covers elections,  polling and demographics. Before joining The Times in 2013, he worked as  a staff writer for The New Republic.  
@Nate_Cohn 
 
A version of this article appears in print on July 19, 2019, Section A, Page 1 of the New York edition with the headline: Electoral College Might Be in Trump’s Corner.