A [FiveThirtyEight]( email
[Election Update](
Wednesday, September 16, 2020
By [Geoffrey Skelley](
From 30,000 feet, the presidential race looks much as it did when we first launched our presidential election forecast in August. Joe Biden has about a 3 in 4 chance of winning compared to President Trumpâs roughly 1 in 4 shot, according to [FiveThirtyEightâs forecast](. Bidenâs chances did dip down to a 2 in 3 shot after the Republican National Convention on Aug. 31, but overall, his chances of winning have hung out in the low- to mid-70 percent range. By contrast, Trumpâs chances have mostly bounced around in the mid- to high-20s.
But underneath the topline numbers, there has still been some fairly big movement in a handful of key battleground states, and the news has been mostly good for Biden. If we look at how much Bidenâs odds have changed in states where both he and Trump have at least a 1 in 10 shot of winning since we launched the forecast on Aug. 12, Biden has improved his chances in 17 of 20 states. And in some cases, Bidenâs improvement has been considerable — +15 percentage points in Minnesota, +12 points in Arizona and +10 points in Wisconsin, for instance. By comparison, Trumpâs odds have really only improved in Florida, although he hasnât lost much ground in states such as Georgia and Ohio, which may signal that Bidenâs electoral gains will not be that expansive. (Trump still leads in Texas, for instance, despite Bidenâs improvement there.)
Bidenâs odds improved in most battleground states
Change in Joe Bidenâs chances of winning in states where he or Donald Trump has at least a 10 percent chance of winning, between forecast launch on Aug. 12 and Sept. 16 (as of 9:30 a.m. ET)
Bidenâs chance of winning
State Aug. 12 Sept. 16 Change
Minnesota 71.8% 86.6% +14.8
Arizona 55.2 67.6 +12.4
Wisconsin 69.8 79.9 +10.0
Michigan 81.2 86.9 +5.7
Maine 77.3 82.6 +5.3
North Carolina 49.0 52.9 +3.9
Nevada 76.7 80.2 +3.5
Pennsylvania 73.4 75.8 +2.4
Texas 29.1 31.4 +2.3
Iowa 31.4 33.5 +2.0
Colorado 84.9 86.4 +1.5
New Hampshire 71.6 73.0 +1.3
Georgia 34.3 35.4 +1.2
Montana 12.1 13.0 +1.0
Alaska 19.0 19.6 +0.7
Ohio 44.8 45.2 +0.4
Mississippi 12.8 12.9 +0.1
South Carolina 12.8 12.8 +0.0
Missouri 12.9 10.3 -2.6
Florida 64.1 60.7 -3.4
But Bidenâs improvement in Arizona is particularly noteworthy as Arizona is a [cornerstone of most Electoral College maps]( in which Trump wins. That is, if Trump carries the state, he wins the election 59 percent of time, according to our forecast; but if Biden wins Arizona, Trump has less than a 7 percent chance of winning overall. And three polls released in the last few days show Biden ahead in the Grand Canyon State, although by varying margins. A [CBS News/YouGov poll]( found him up by 3 points while a [Gravis Marketing survey]( gave him just a 2-point lead over Trump. But an [OH Predictive Insights poll](20AZPOP/AZPOP%20Presidential%20Crosstabs.pdf) gave Biden a much larger 10-point advantage, 52 percent to 42 percent.
Meanwhile, Bidenâs improvement in Minnesota is also bad news for Trump, as the campaign [has long viewed Minnesota]( as a potential target [to expand the map]( — the president only lost the state [by about 2 points in 2016](. However, Minnesota seems to be steadily moving away from Trump. An [ABC News/Washington Post survey]( released today gave Biden a sizable 16-point edge, 57 percent to 41 percent, among likely voters. And two separate polls released this weekend by [CBS News/YouGov]( and the [New York Times/Siena College]( each found Biden ahead by 9 points in Minnesota, 50 percent to 41 percent. Still, a Morning Consult survey [released yesterday]( might buoy the Trump campaignâs hopes of breaking through in Minnesota, as it put Bidenâs lead at only 4 points. And Trump is doing better in Wisconsin, although heâs still an underdog there as recent polls suggest Biden has a fairly sizable advantage. A [CNN/SSRS survey released yesterday]( gave Biden a 10-point lead, while an [ABC News/Washington Post survey]( out today gave Biden a 6-point edge. And this past weekend, the [New York Times/Siena College found]( Biden up by 5 points there.
[Florida]( is the only battleground state where Trumpâs odds have increased appreciably, but thatâs an important silver lining for the president, as winning Florida is make or break for Trumpâs chances of winning the election. If Trump wins the Sunshine State, he wins the presidency in 57 percent of our forecastâs simulations, while a Biden win there would give Trump less than a 2 percent shot at victory. And at this point, Florida polls [continue to give Trump a decent shot]( at winning the state, although they havenât been universally positive. Perhaps most notably, a poll released on Tuesday by [Monmouth University found]( Biden up by 3 to 5 points among likely voters, depending on turnout. However, another poll out yesterday from [Florida Atlantic University found]( the two candidates tied in a dead heat at 50 percent after undecided voters were pushed to pick a candidate, so at this point, Florida remains ultra-competitive with Trump gaining ground there.
Trumpâs chances havenât improved much elsewhere, but itâs worth noting that his standing hasnât really worsened in a couple of right-leaning battleground states that Democrats have eyed, like [Georgia]( and [Ohio]( either. Thatâs important for Trump because not only would losing either state dramatically hurt his chances of winning overall (Trump would have about a 1 percent chance of winning if he lost in either one), but it also signals that this election might not be a blowout where Democrats turn states like Georgia and Texas blue.
Bottom line: The broad electoral picture hasnât changed much since we launched the forecast in mid-August, but weâve observed some real changes in a number of key battleground states. The problem for the president is that most of those shifts have been to Bidenâs benefit, except for the all-important state of Florida. Trump very much remains in contention, but he is an underdog for reelection at this point.
Check out our latest [2020 election forecasts](.
[Latest Forecast](
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