Chattanooga Times Free Press

TRUMP HAS NOWHERE TO EXPAND

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Kamala Harris’ chances of winning the election continue to increase because she is improving her performanc­e on two critical and related metrics — the gender gap and the intensity gap.

A key issue driving these trends is abortion, which is having two effects at the same time: It is energizing the Democratic base, especially younger women, and it is discouragi­ng some of Donald Trump’s most ardent anti-abortion rights supporters, who fear he’s wobbling to woo moderate voters.

This collision has been building since the Dobbs case in June 2022, when the Supreme Court — with the support of three Trump-appointed justices — overturned the constituti­onal right to obtain an abortion. Anthony Scaramucci, briefly Trump’s communicat­ions director, told The Hill that on the abortion issue, “He’s in trouble. He knows it.”

In both of Trump’s national races, he received between 46% and 47%, and today, in an average of national polls compiled by the website Real Clear Politics, he attracts 46.3% of the vote. That means he has a high floor of devoted followers, but a low ceiling of possible support, and almost no room to expand his base.

Sure, there are a few genuinely uncommitte­d voters out there, but the real battle is about mobilizati­on, not conversion. If your base is enthusiast­ic, then they are more likely to give money, volunteer time, talk to their friends and, most importantl­y, actually vote.

In 2020, about two-thirds of all eligible voters cast ballots, the highest turnout since 1900. But that means 1 of 3 did not vote.

Who stays home — or votes for a third-party candidate — is just as important as who goes to the polls. And for a generation, Democrats have depended heavily on their ability to maximize the female vote.

In 1996, for example, Republican Bob Dole narrowly won the male vote, but Bill Clinton clobbered him by 16 points with women. In 2016, Hillary Clinton won the women’s vote with 54% but lost to Trump; Joe Biden increased his share to 57% of women four years later and squeaked to victory.

In the latest ABC/Ipsos poll, Harris leads Trump by 4 points nationally, and since the Democratic convention, her advantage with women voters has grown from 6 to 13 points. When Biden was the party’s nominee, Trump enjoyed a large advantage on intensity, but that has now been reversed. Nine of 10 Democrats view Harris favorably, but only 7 in 10 Republican­s like Trump. Abortion is critical to that shift. Enter Harris, who’s planning a 50-stop bus tour focused on reproducti­ve rights. She has shrewdly expanded the abortion question in two ways: She has included a defense of IVF and other fertility treatments that are even more widely popular than abortion rights — but opposed by the staunchest anti-abortion rights factions. And she has cast abortion as a symbolic example of a larger battle for women’s rights and personal freedom.

The New York Times reports, “For women younger than 45, abortion has overtaken the economy as the single most important issue to their vote.” By 20 points, voters prefer Harris over Trump to handle the abortion issue — double the advantage Biden enjoyed.

It’s hard to imagine any True Trumpers voting for Harris — but that’s not the point. Trump has little ability to expand his base and has never tried to. His whole strategy depends on maximizing their fervor — and their turnout. So, if Harris can continue to expand the gender gap and the intensity gap, the odds swing clearly in her favor.

 ?? ?? Steven Roberts
Steven Roberts

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