| | About that Florida poll that shows Biden crushing Trump... | | | Just as Donald Trump prepared to jet to Orlando to formally kick off his bid for a second term in 2020, a new Quinnipiac University poll was released that showed the President trailing former Vice President Joe Biden in the Sunshine State by 9 percentage points. Which is a big headline! After all, Trump isn't choosing to announce his 2020 bid in Florida by accident. It's a state he won in 2016 and one that he knows he badly needs if he wants to win in 2020. So a poll that has him losing by almost double digits to the Democratic front-runner feels like a Very Important Development. And it might be! But there's also reason to take this latest Florida poll with a grain of salt. Actually several grains. Consider: 1) The November 2020 election is 504 days away. Which is -- and this is a technical term -- a long way away. And lots can and will happen in Florida and nationwide between now and then. 2) Past Florida election results don't bear out a blowout, which a 9-point win would be, for either side. Here are the victory margins in Florida in the last five presidential races: 2016 (Trump +1), 2012 (Obama +1), 2008 (Obama +3), 2004 (Bush +5), 2000 (even). There's just nothing to suggest any Democratic candidate would beat Trump by 9 points. (Or that Trump would beat any of the Democrats by that margin.) The story is the same in the 2018 statewide races in Florida; Republicans won both the governor's office and the Senate race by razor-thin margins. 3) Speaking of those 2018 GOP victories, Politico's Florida expert Marc Caputo reminded me that the final Q polls in both the Senate and the governor's race had the Democratic nominees winning by 7 points. Both lost narrowly. That's not to say Quinnipiac is a bad pollster -- it isn't -- but it is to suggest that its idea of what the Florida electorate might look like heavily undersold the Republican nominees for Senate and governor in 2018. The Point: Florida is going to be one of the handful of most competitive states in 2020. And the eventual Democratic nominee may wind up beating Trump there. But there's reason to be suspicious that the Q poll represents what the race might look like 500 days from now. -- Chris | | "I don't believe the polls right now, guys." -- Joe Biden saying the campaign is a "marathon" after the Quinnipiac poll showed him ahead of Trump in Florida. | | | | Donald Trump has never stopped running for president | | Donald Trump is officially running for a second term in 2020. But he's had his eye on the presidency for a long time. Do you have your eye on The Point on YouTube? Subscribe! | | Ron Brownstein on whether Mitch McConnell's legislative blockade can withstand an election interference bill This WaPo story on what led Patrick Shanahan to drop out of the running for SecDef is a wow Donald Trump thinks about Florida a whole lot, according to Marc Caputo The Orlando Sentinel editorial board is endorsing anyone other than Donald Trump in 2020 The Fake Influencer industry Tony Robbins sounds like a totally awful person | | All Hiss Golden Messenger does is make beautiful, soul-stirring music. Here's his newest and latest, "I Need a Teacher." | | SUMMER JOB SEASON WAITS FOR NO ONE | | What's a former governor of Maine to do during the busy summer tourist season? Bartend in a popular coastal watering hole, apparently. Former Gov. Paul LePage is expected to tend bar at McSeagull's Restaurant in Boothbay Harbor, according to The Associated Press. LePage's wife has worked as a server at the waterfront seafood restaurant before -- and also plans to work there this summer. | | LAUREN'S CAMPAIGN TRAIL LATEST | | Donald Trump: Is kicking off his reelection campaign tonight with a rally in Orlando. Bernie Sanders: Plans to deliver a live response to Trump's campaign kickoff rally tonight. Joe Biden: Says his campaign has raised nearly $20 million since entering the 2020 race. Amy Klobuchar: Released a list of actions she'd take in her first 100 days as president, including addressing climate change and health care. Kamala Harris: Has been given a column by Essence magazine -- though the publication says it is not an endorsement. | | Thursday's the day to watch on the Alabama US Senate front. Roy Moore, the controversial Trump-backed Republican former judge who lost to Democrat Doug Jones in a special election in 2017, has publicly teased another run for the same seat. And on Thursday, he'll make his plans known, according to Politico. Should he enter the race to take on now-Sen. Jones, it'll be a crowded Republican primary. | | | | | |
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