
Harry Enten, a CNN data scientist, was surprised to learn that new polling data showed that former president Donald Trump is still outperforming black citizens in his charge to retake the White House in 2024.
During a CNN section on Monday, Enten noted that President Joe Biden had 86 percent of black citizens ‘ support at the same time the 2020 presidential election, but he now has the help of 70 % of black voters.  ,
By contrast, at this point in 2020, Trump had the help of 7 percent of black citizens, whereas in the recent presidential race, he holds the aid of around 21 percent of black electors, which is a voting wall that has greatly favored Democrats in recent decades.
” I keep looking for this to transform, to go back to a traditional rule and it, just put, has not yet”, Enten said.
The CNN analyst noted that the polling data demonstrates that Trump is gaining some of the dark voter assistance that Liberals are losing as well.
” We’re careening towards a historic achievement for a Republican presidential candidate, the likes of which we have not seen in six ages”, Enten continued.
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Enten noted that age-related voter trends are more evident in the change in support among dark citizens. Black citizens over the age of 50 had increased by 43 items in the overall poll percentage from 80 percent to 37 percent today, compared to Biden’s support for him in 2020, while his support for him had only decreased by 83 percent to 74 percent since 2020.
” I’m like silent because you always look at history and you go,’ Okay, this is a traditional second,'” Enten said. If this voting is any close to accurate, we’re at a traditional point where black voters under the age of 50 are leaving in droves, which has historically been a significant component of the democratic partnership.
In a two-way race, the CNN analyst even took note of a new New York Times/Siena College poll of battleground state, which showed that Trump’s support was 23 percent and Biden’s support was around 63 percent. When adjusting for a three-way debate between Robert F. Kennedy Jr. and Biden, the survey revealed a decline in dark voting support. In a three-way battleground state competition, the Democrat incumbent had 49 percent of black voters ‘ support, while Trump had a smaller fall, with Kennedy holding 11 percent, and Trump had a smaller drop.