By Philip Bump August 16 at 2:09 PM
Trump campaigns in Florida. (EPA/CRISTOBAL HERRERA)
OK, look. To be elected president, Donald Trump needs to win more electoral votes than Hillary Clinton. One simple yardstick to measure that is to see where Trump outperforms Mitt Romney in 2012; after all, Romney lost, so Trump needs to do better than Romney. Flip at least one or two states that voted for President Obama four years ago.
The most likely candidates for that would seem to be the states that Obama won most narrowly: Florida, Ohio, Virginia and Colorado, in that order -- setting aside North Carolina, which was second-closest but which Romney won.
10 states where the race between Clinton and Trump could be tight
In Virginia and Colorado, both Hillary Clinton and the largest super PAC supporting her are pulling ads because they're up by so much: 11 points in Colorado according to the most recent RealClearPolitics (RCP) average of polls and 10 in Virginia, after The Post's new poll released on Tuesday. Those numbers could change, but those are pretty big leads with 80-odd days to go. They're pull-your-ads big. (Oh, and North Carolina, the close state that Romney won? Clinton leads there, too.)
Florida, though, has been interesting. A state with a large nonwhite population, it has been relatively close for Trump, with RCP showing him down 3.6 points in polling. And then, on Tuesday afternoon, a new poll from Monmouth University: Clinton 48, Trump 39. A 9-point spread.
Why's Trump falling behind in Florida? The same reasons he's falling behind everywhere else. Clinton gets 92 percent of the vote from Democrats; Trump gets only 79 percent of the vote from Republicans. Trump has a lead of 40 points among white men, a group Romney won by 30. But white women back Clinton by 10 points and Romney won them in 2012 by 17 points. That 10-point swing for Trump among men is more than offset by that 27-point swing among women.
Even before the Monmouth poll the RCP average in Florida favored Clinton by 3.6 points -- not insurmountable, but grim. Now it's 4.5 points.
We can compare to the past two cycles and see that in 2008 Obama closed a bigger gap than that to win in the state. He closed a smaller gap in 2012, though the average was also 2 points off of the actual results.
More:
https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/the-fix/wp/2016/08/16/down-9-in-florida-we-have-to-ask-when-is-donald-trump-going-to-try-to-win-this-election/