Posted on 01/09/2024 12:29:27 PM PST by backpacker_c
The first Emerson College Polling survey in Nevada of 2024 finds former President Doald Trump with a 65-point lead over his closest competitor, Ron DeSantis, in the Republican Party-run presidential caucus, 73% to 8%. Six percent support Vivek Ramaswamy, 4% support Chris Christie, and 1% Ryan Binkley. Eight percent are undecided.
Trump 73% desantis 8% ramaswamy 6% christie 4%
In a hypothetical 2024 election between Biden and Trump, 47% of voters plan to support Trump while 45% support Biden. Eight percent are undecided.
(Excerpt) Read more at emersoncollegepolling.com ...
nevada will likely go to biden at the end, because the casino and restaurant unions have so much power in controlling the vote
sorry, missed some mis-spellings/typos .
Yet Fox Snooze pretends their “debates” aren’t the joke that they really are.
I don’t know, there will be a lot of 3rd party activity I suspect in 2024 that was not there in 20... Assuming Biden is the nominee (and honestly folks I firmly believe he won’t be... for a lot of reasons) but if he is, those third party options are going to bleed votes from him... don’t be surprised if a lot of states that went blue by small margins in 16 and 20 don’t go blue.
Dems took it in 16 and 20 by about 2.5% each time.... if the third parities are on the ballot... Kennedy, Green Party etc... bleeding off enough along with the notable shift in Hispanic support and blacks away from Biden, Nevada may not be off the table for Trump.
That said, I am not saying Dem won’t win it, just saying I wouldn’t write it off just yet.
Give money to the Green Party. Bang for the buck. You wanna give it to Rhona McDaniel?
Reminder that NV in their last election statewide put Joe Lombardo (GOP) in as governor and threw that commie bastard Sisolak out.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.