New York:America's top pollsters have thumbtacked their final election forecasts and we, the audience, are thinking just one thought: 2016!
If everything we know now about 2016 hadn't happened -- Cambridge Analytica's behavioural targeting Facebook for the Trump campaign, the James Comey shocker, Russian interference and the battleground state polls being off -- then Biden's steady lead across a dumpster load of polls may have been taken more seriously.
But no. Four years on from 2016, the mood is stubbornly dystopian, the conversation keeps returning to some version of the apocalypse.
IANS caught up with plenty of voters who had either dropped off their votes already or were on their way to vote as they took our call.
One of them, on farmland out in Washington State, said this: "When I see some state poll numbers showing double-digit leads, I think, who're they kidding? The culture wars have begun, the mobocracy is here."
The panic over polling can mostly be traced back to the 2016 math that went wrong, mainly in the bellwether states.
That year, the final RealClearPolitics poll average showed Hillary Clinton leading Trump by 3.2 percentage points nationwide, her actual margin in the popular vote was 2.1 points.
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The errors came from state polling. RealClearPolitics average showed Clinton leading by 3.6 points in Michigan, by 2.1 points in Pennsylvania, and by 6.5 points in Wisconsin. Trump carried all three states by less than 1 point.