Loading...

Trump Trails Top Democrats in New Minnesota Poll

October 22, 2019by Torey Van Oot
Trump Trails Top Democrats in New Minnesota Poll
President Donald Trump. (Photo by Dan McCue)

MINNEAPOLIS — President Donald Trump trails several leading Democratic candidates, as well as U.S. Sen. Amy Klobuchar, at this point in the presidential campaign in Minnesota, according to a new Star Tribune Minnesota Poll.

The two current front-runners for the Democratic nomination, former Vice President Joe Biden and U.S. Sen. Elizabeth Warren, both beat the president by double digits among Minnesota voters. Voters polled picked Biden over Trump by 12 percentage points, 50% to 38%.

Warren, who attracted a large crowd at an August campaign rally in St. Paul, tops Trump 51% to 40%. U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, who places third in most national polls of the Democratic field, is ahead of Trump 49% to 40%.

The survey also asked voters about a hypothetical match-up between Trump and Minnesota’s Klobuchar, who trails in the crowded Democratic field. The third-term senator finished ahead of Trump by the widest margin, 55% to 38%. The poll of 800 registered voters, conducted Oct. 14-16, has a margin of error of 3.5 percentage points.

The poll was conducted less than a week after Trump visited Minneapolis for a high-profile campaign rally as part of an emerging effort by a Republican nominee to carry Minnesota for the first time since 1972. Trump vowed an all-out fight to win the state, which he narrowly lost to Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton in 2016.

With four months to go until the Iowa caucuses and 19 candidates still in the race, the fight for the Democratic nomination is far from settled. A number of those polled who opposed Trump’s re-election said in follow-up interviews that they remain torn on which Democrat is best positioned to beat the president.

“I would vote for anybody but Trump. Anyone,” said Ron Hagland, a retired social worker from Cloquet.

Hagland, 72, who described himself as a political independent who leans libertarian, is seeking a “middle-of-the-road” Democratic nominee. He likes Klobuchar but worries she can’t win. He called Trump “absolutely unqualified” for office. “He has demonstrated … behavior that is just a breach of trust with the American public,” he said.

Karen London, 63, a real estate professional from St. Louis Park, shares Hagland’s outlook. London, a self-described independent who voted for Clinton in 2016, said she tried to give Trump a chance after his election. But his presidency has left her in a “deep depression.” She picked Biden, Sanders and Warren over Trump in the head-to-head matchups, even though she thinks all three front-runners are too old. Her favorites right now are South Bend Mayor Pete Buttigieg, U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris and Klobuchar, but she worries about the electability of all three. Ultimately, she said, she will support the Democratic nominee, whoever it is.

The president’s backers remain deeply committed in their support, particularly voters in rural areas and in the Twin Cities suburbs.

Chris Skluzacek, 52, a maintenance director at a senior living center, said he voted for Trump in 2016 because he always wanted to see a businessman as president. The New Prague resident hasn’t been disappointed and plans to cast a ballot for Trump again next year.

“I think the economy’s better,” he said. “It seems to me there’s jobs opening all over.”

The outcome of the election in Minnesota — and nationwide — may swing on voters in crucial “pivot counties,” who helped seal Trump’s victory by going for the GOP nominee after voting for Barack Obama in the previous two presidential elections.

Erik Bangert, 46, lives in one of 19 of such counties in Minnesota. The grain truck driver from Twin Lakes voted for Obama twice. But in 2016, hungry for a change and fed up with politicians he didn’t trust, Bangert went for the candidate he considered the “lesser of two evils” — Donald Trump.

“He’s like a, I can’t say a real person, but he says it like it is and doesn’t try to sugarcoat anything,” Bangert said. “And he doesn’t get offended by everything and things people say.”

Bangert plans to vote for Trump next year. Like Skluzacek, he cited the economy as a driving factor. “Unemployment’s down,” he said. “Jobs, that’s a big thing.”

When it comes to the presidential election, Minnesotans remain divided on gender, geographic and partisan lines. While the three front-runners for the Democratic nomination outpoll the president by wide margins in Hennepin and Ramsey counties, Trump ties or leads among voters living in the metro suburbs and greater Minnesota. In Northern Minnesota, voters prefer Trump over Biden 47% to 41% and Warren 49% to 43%. Klobuchar, who won commanding victories against Republican rivals in her Senate races, is locked in a statistical tie with the president among voters living in the suburbs and in rural areas north and south.

Independent voters in Minnesota lean toward Trump’s Democratic challengers, the poll showed. The Democratic candidates’ victory margins narrow among male voters and those making $50,000-plus a year. All four of Trump’s rivals included in the poll win a majority of women, a key voting bloc for the Democratic Party in the 2018 midterms.

Some polls and projections leading up to the 2016 election, including those conducted in Minnesota, failed to fully capture support for Trump. Benjamin Toff, an assistant professor and expert on polling at the University of Minnesota’s Hubbard School of Journalism and Mass Communication, pointed to a report that cited methodology issues in some state-level polls and undecided voters breaking for Trump or a third-party candidate at the very end of the campaign as key factors.

Skluzacek has friends and neighbors who shy from publicly backing the president.

“I know when it comes to it, the way they’re going to vote is going to be Trump,” he said.

And, with more than a year until the November general election, not all voters have made up their minds on whether to support Trump or an eventual rival. Across the four matchups, between 7% and 12% of respondents remain undecided.

Ruben Perdomo, 52, has concerns about Trump’s handling of trade and foreign policy. But the painter from Farmington also isn’t sold on any of the Democrats in the race. He plans to wait to learn more about the candidates and see how the economy fares.

“In the end I have to make a decision, obviously,” he said. “But right now, I don’t know.”

———

©2019 Star Tribune (Minneapolis)

Visit the Star Tribune (Minneapolis) at www.startribune.com

Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

In The News

Health

Voting

2020 Elections

Judge to Hold Hearing Over Georgia Special Grand Jury Report

ATLANTA (AP) — A judge is set to hear arguments Tuesday on whether to release a report by a special grand... Read More

ATLANTA (AP) — A judge is set to hear arguments Tuesday on whether to release a report by a special grand jury tasked with investigating whether then-President Donald Trump and his allies broke any laws as they sought to overturn his narrow 2020 election loss in Georgia. Fulton County... Read More

December 6, 2022
by Dan McCue
Texas’ Top Election Official Resigns, Abbott Names Replacement

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas’ top election official, Secretary of State John Scott, resigned from that post on Monday, saying he... Read More

AUSTIN, Texas — Texas’ top election official, Secretary of State John Scott, resigned from that post on Monday, saying he will relinquish the office at the end of the year. As a result, on Tuesday, Gov. Greg Abbott announced he will appoint Republican State Sen. Jane... Read More

November 1, 2022
by Dan McCue
Justices Reject Graham Bid to Block Georgia Testimony

WASHINGTON — Just hours after Chief Justice John Roberts handed former President Donald Trump a temporary victory in one of... Read More

WASHINGTON — Just hours after Chief Justice John Roberts handed former President Donald Trump a temporary victory in one of his legal battles, a member of Trump’s inner circle on Tuesday found the high court far less accommodating. In an unsigned, two-paragraph order, the Supreme Court... Read More

Jan. 6 Hearing Promises 'Surprising' Details Before Election

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Jan. 6 committee is set to unveil “surprising” details including evidence from Donald Trump’s Secret Service about... Read More

WASHINGTON (AP) — The House Jan. 6 committee is set to unveil “surprising” details including evidence from Donald Trump’s Secret Service about the 2021 attack on the U.S. Capitol in what is likely to be its last public hearing before the November midterm elections. The hearing Thursday afternoon, the 10th public... Read More

September 23, 2022
by Tom Ramstack
State Attorneys General Face Ethics Complaint for Supporting Trump’s Election Fraud Claims

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s mounting legal problems are spreading this week to pull in state attorneys general who supported him... Read More

WASHINGTON — Donald Trump’s mounting legal problems are spreading this week to pull in state attorneys general who supported him in his failed effort to overturn the 2020 presidential election. The legal watchdog group The 65 Project filed complaints against 15 state attorneys general Wednesday to... Read More

August 16, 2022
by Dan McCue
AG to Appoint Election Monitor to Oversee Upcoming New Hampshire Primary

CONCORD, N.H. — State Attorney General John Formella announced Tuesday that he will appoint an election monitor to oversee the... Read More

CONCORD, N.H. — State Attorney General John Formella announced Tuesday that he will appoint an election monitor to oversee the state’s Sept. 13 primary elections after an investigation revealed a pattern of apparent mistakes made in past contests. The events that led to the decision mostly... Read More

News From The Well
Exit mobile version