- Two weeks before the election, President
Donald Trump is trailing Democratic nomineeJoe Biden by 10 percentage points nationally, according to FiveThirtyEight. - After running over 140,600 election simulations for the 2020 presidential race, Decision Desk HQ gave Trump a 14.1% chance of winning.
- Over 41 million votes have already been cast and Trump is lagging in four of the swing states he needs to win.
With less than two weeks until Election Day, things are not looking good for the Trump campaign.
According to an average of national polls from FiveThirtyEight, Democratic nominee Joe Biden leads President Donald Trump by 10 percentage points nationally.
But while Trump's chances of a second term appear to be on the decline, it is still within the realm of possibility for him to make a comeback as he did in 2016, surging past former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton.
When forecasters predict election outcomes, they typically run a large number of simulations and ascertain how many times a given contender wins. That translates to a probability of victory.
Decision Desk HQ, an election forecasting company, ran 140,605 election simulations for the 2020 presidential race. Trump won 19,825 model runs, giving him a 14.1% chance of victory on November 3.
Looking at those 19,825 Trump victory simulations, here's how often each state broke for Trump:
When analysts say that Trump has a narrow path to a second term, this tends to be what they're talking about. Understanding which states are critical for Trump is an effective way to gauge how he's faring.
Take, for instance, Florida. Trump wins the election in only 5% of scenarios where he loses Florida. That's why on election night, all eyes will be on the Sunshine State, which is expected to reveal results sooner than other states.
Same with North Carolina — another necessary component of 84% of Trump's winning simulations.
There are multiple ways for Trump to win back the White House, but the president is in dire straits. He is currently behind in the polls in four of the most crucial swing states: North Carolina, Arizona, Pennsylvania, and Florida.
According to Kiel Williams, an author at
"Only Texas — another state Trump is struggling to hold — and California — where Trump has no chance of victory — have more electoral votes than Florida," Williams told Insider. "The loss of Florida is devastating to Trump's Electoral College calculus."
The Trump campaign is also having a difficult time maintaining an edge in Ohio — currently home to the most competitive race in the country. According to FiveThirtyEight, Ohio is a toss-up, with each candidate predicted to receive 49.5% of the popular vote in the Buckeye State. But Ohio appears on 92% of simulations in which Trump emerged victorious and a loss there would also be detrimental to the president's chances in other Midwestern swing states.
"If Trump has lost enough support to lose Ohio, he has almost certainly lost Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania as well," Williams said.
The time for Trump to win over undecided voters is dwindling.
As of October 21, over 41 million people have already cast their votes through mail-in and early voting in an election expected to receive the most mailed votes in US history. At this point in 2016, two weeks away from the election, just 5.9 million mail-in votes had been cast. According to voting rights experts, voting by mail is expected to make up 50% to 70% of the total vote in November.
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