President Biden has lost ground to Donald Trump in more than a dozen battleground states or districts after his disastrous debate performance last week, according to polling conducted by a Democrat-affiliated nonprofit.
The data from OpenLabs, reported by Puck News, indicates that if the election were held today, the 81-year-old Biden would not only lose all seven of the swing states thought to hold the key to the White House in 2024 — Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin — but also states he won convincingly four years ago.
Those include New Hampshire, which last voted Republican in 2000; Virginia, which Biden won by 10 points in 2020; and New Mexico, which has gone Democrat in seven of the last eight presidential elections.
If that data proves correct on Nov. 5, Trump, 78, would become the 47th president in an Electoral College landslide, defeating Biden 335-203.
In the 14 battlegrounds spotlighted by OpenLabs, which also included Colorado, Maine, Minnesota, and Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, Biden lost between 1.7% and 2.4% to Trump compared to the Democrat’s pre-debate numbers.
The memo also reported that 40% of voters who backed Biden in 2020 think he should drop out, while 55% of swing voters want him off the Democratic ticket, and just 29% say he should stay on.
The polling memo was sent out Sunday, as Democrats grappled with the scope of Biden’s performance and the White House tried to solidify backing for the president.
One former Democratic congressman, Tim Ryan of Ohio, took to the pages of Newsweek with a call for the party to make Vice President Kamala Harris the nominee.
What to know about the fallout from President Biden’s debate performance:
- President Biden’s poor performance in the first 2024 presidential debate has left even some Democrats unsure of his fitness for office and future as the party’s candidate.
- Former President Obama admitted that Biden had a “bad” debate, while his rival former President Trump suggested that he was in a “trance” and “choked.”
- Biden told a crowd at a North Carolina rally the day after the debate that he doesn’t “debate as well as I used to” — but insisted that he can still “do this job.”
- The New York Times editorial board called on the president to serve the country by dropping out of the race. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution published a similar editorial a day later.
- Biden gathered with his family to assess the campaign’s future at Camp David, with his son Hunter reportedly pushing for him to stay in the race. Family members questioned if the president’s top advisors should be fired after the disastrous debate.
- Legendary journalist Carl Bernstein revealed that sources close to Biden have witnessed as many as 20 episodes of cognitive decline in the past year.
- Rep. Lloyd Doggett (D-Texas) became the first House Democrat to call on Biden to drop out.
“We have to rip the band aid off! Too much is at stake,” Ryantweeted. [Harris] has significantly grown into her job, she will destroy Trump in debate, highlight choice issue, energize our base, bring back young voters and give us generational change. It’s time!”
OpenLabs showed Harris with a slightly higher favorability rating than Biden (41%-38%), and a lower unfavorability rating (52%-60%).
The best-polling potential Biden replacement, however, was Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg, who the survey showed to be above water in favorability (32%-28%, with 40% saying they didn’t know enough about him).
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Michigan Gov. Gretchen Whitmer also scored well, with a favorability score of plus-three percentage points, though 55% of respondents said they didn’t know enough about her to form an opinion.
“Accounting for name recognition, Buttigieg and Whitmer show more significant improvement, with both leading outright or tied in all current battleground states,” the pollsters said. “Neither Harris or [California Gov. Gavin] Newsom benefit from the name recognition adjustment.”
The Biden campaign has insisted that the president is not dropping out of the race, and has vowed to show up for a second debate against Trump, set for Sept. 10.