2020 U.S. Presidential Election - Took place November 3, 2020. Former U.S. Vice President Joe Biden assumed office January 20, 2021.

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Trump's best investment has to be those new screens and projectors. Way better than just him speaking, as he can just have movie nights at his rallies.

Even though it might not help because Trump supporters heavily want their 2A, I hope he gets a clip Gun Czar Beto's remarks on gun control.
 

Archive on the happening thread
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One thing that I found interesting about the debate is when Biden said that under his administration, China, Russia, and Iran
"will pay " for interfering in the election. This is the same guy who did nothing after the Russians invaded Crimea, supported China's entrance in the WTO, and helped make the Iran nuclear deal. Trump has been nothing but hard on these countries, and Joe was the one that allowed them to grow. He will be weak on them as Obama was, and they will continue to grow.
As I say, red lines for the public and red envelopes behind the curtains.
 
Uh, what?
It's a god damn shame this dropped so close to election day.

This would have FAR bigger of an impact if it had dropped sometime in September before a lot of the early voting started.

Still huge though.
I said this in the Hunter thread, but I'm not sure how much people would care.

People deep down already know politicans are corrupt. I've talked to people about this, and they all say "butwhataboutTrump???"

What will bury Biden more than any scandal is him accidentally admitting on live national TV in front of 60 million people that he is in fact going to destroy the oil industry and eliminate all their jobs. Jobs that in 2016 the Democrats said were never coming back in the Rust Belt states that Trump actually did bring back. Now Joe Biden is threatening to take them away again. That means more to normies than another politican being corrupt because they're all corrupt anyway.
 
Uh, what?

I said this in the Hunter thread, but I'm not sure how much people would care.

People deep down already know politicans are corrupt. I've talked to people about this, and they all say "butwhataboutTrump???"

What will bury Biden more than any scandal is him accidentally admitting on live national TV in front of 60 million people that he is in fact going to destroy the oil industry and eliminate all their jobs. Jobs that in 2016 the Democrats said were never coming back in the Rust Belt states that Trump actually did bring back. Now Joe Biden is threatening to take them away again. That means more to normies than another politican being corrupt because they're all corrupt anyway.

I completely agree that his comments about oil might bury him.

What I'm getting at is this whole Hunter story has basically been buried and memory holed by all the major news networks outside Fox. Most voters won't know what is going on and many have already cast mail in/absentee ballots.
 
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I completely agree that his comments about oil might bury him.

What I'm getting at this this whole Hunter story has basically been buried and memory holed by all the major news networks outside Fox. Most voters won't know what is going on and many have already cast mail in/absentee ballots.
And Biden had to fall for the bait and bring it up along with Rudy's name as well.

I believe these scandals influence the 3 or 4 odd percent to stay home or vote for the opponent. And Biden is already competing with Trump on razor thin margins.
 
I stole this from a Washington Post Article from that Beanie Man video I posted. Here's the TL;DR

Note: You'll probably need to open this in Incognito mode or else it'll ask you to subscribe to the Post.


Edit: Oh sweet, there was an archive - https://archive.md/H7vsa

Three things stand out.

1) The biggest battleground state in this election is Texas. The next three are Georgia, Iowa, and Ohio.

2) Biden is so ahead in the polls right now that if they are underestimating Trump by 5.5 points, Biden still wins.

View attachment 1684525

3) I cannot begin to describe everything wrong with this graph. I'm just shocked the Washington Post had the decency to even post it.

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You will be unsurprised to learn that, according to a poll released on Friday by the New York Times and Siena College, President Trump leads former vice president Joe Biden in Montana. Montana is almost definitionally red, part of the phalanx of Republican states that’s draped over the western Plains and Rocky Mountains.

You might be surprised, though, to learn the margin of Trump’s lead. It’s only seven points, which, if that margin were to hold until Election Day, would represent a 13-point swing away from Trump relative to his 2016 support.

More remarkably, that’s as narrow a race as the pollsters measured in both Michigan and Wisconsin, states Trump won by tiny margins four years ago. In Michigan, the Times-Siena poll had Biden up eight points; in Wisconsin, he was up 10.

This is one poll, of course. By now you’re likely savvy enough to know that its generally more useful to consider polling averages than individual polls. We took the most recent (as of writing) averages in each state, as compiled by FiveThirtyEight, and ordered the states by the current polling margin.

The results are striking.

The state that’s closest at the moment is — Texas. If Joe Biden wins Texas, it’s over.

But it doesn’t get less weird. Georgia, Iowa and Ohio — which Trump won in 2016 by five, nine and eight points, respectively — are the next three closest states. What’s more, Biden leads in the first two.

Notice where Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin land. In 2016, Trump’s narrow wins in those three states earned him the presidency. Now, Biden leads by at least six points in each. Arizona is closer than any of those three states. Alaska is closer.

We highlighted a particularly odd stretch of margins. South Carolina is closer than Michigan? Michigan is closer than Montana? Nebraska is closer than Minnesota? What is happening here?

We must of course note that polling a bit over a week before the 2016 election also showed Trump trailing in key states by fairly wide margins. All of those states that are narrower than Arizona are within about three points — a margin that could be within a normal polling error range.

Earlier this month, we made a tool allowing readers to see how errors in the polls (underestimating the number of Trump voters who turn out, for example) would affect the national results. At the moment, if the polls in every state were wrong in the exact same way as they were in 2016 — Biden still wins the presidency with over 300 electoral votes. (If the polls are off to the same degree as 2016 but in the other direction — which could happen! — Biden’s margin is far bigger.)

Feel free to play with the slider. You have to assume a pretty big uniform shift to Trump for him to win.

But, of course, that’s assuming a lot of things that we shouldn’t assume. A big one is that the polls will shift over the next 11 days. In 2016, that is why Trump won: The polls narrowed dramatically in the last few days of the race as well as underestimated his support. Earlier this week, we made a tool that tracked a number of potential swing states relative to how the polls narrowed four years ago. The takeaway is this table, showing where the polls are now, how they’ve changed over the past week, where they were four years ago at the same point and how those polls had changed.

As of writing, the average shift across the swing states in the past week (setting aside Nebraska) was about a quarter of a percentage point toward Trump. During the same period in 2016, the polls had shifted an average of a point toward Trump. The problem for Trump is that he trails now by an average of 4.3 points in these states, while he was down only 2.5 points then.

A lot can change, in theory — but it hasn’t so far. This race has been remarkably static. Trump was able to gain ground four years ago in part because many voters still hadn’t made up their minds. That’s less the case now: Most Americans have very strong opinions about Trump and whether he deserves a second term. There’s less room for Trump to pick up support without Biden losing any, and so far that hasn’t been happening.

So, who knows. Maybe Montana will be closer than Michigan. If it is, it’s easy to guess who will be president next January.
>Wyoming more for Trump/red than TN, MS, or AS

They must've gotten the goods from Hunter
 
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At the end of the video this message is stated
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Cher is rallying for Biden (predictable).

Notice the enthusiasm isn't nearly as big.
What the fuck is it with ugly fat niggers, ugly fat spics, ugly fat mud people and ugly fat people in general promoted by the democratic party. They start the rally off with that shit.

To be honest, If Biden ran in 2016 and won the nomination instead of Hillary, I would have voted for him over Trump due to reasons earlier stated. The best time to be president was 4 years ago for him but two things stopped him, Hillary Clinton and himself. Biden would have made more sense since Obama was held in high regard by democrats and Joe could have done way better than Hillary in the rust belt.
 
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