The nation’s first caucus and primary are over. The winnowed Republican field has now turned its attention to South Carolina’s February 20 GOP primary, and Democrats in Nevada will caucus on the same day. Success or failure in these early contests can not only lead candidates to drop out, they also signal to voters which candidate has a better chance of being their party’s nominee. To see how this happens, we can use data from the NBC News|SurveyMonkey Weekly Election Tracking Poll.
In almost every weekly tracking poll, we have asked individuals who they support in their party’s presidential primary contest. We also ask who they think will be their party’s eventual nominee.
Among Democrats, supermajorities think that Hillary Clinton will win. A month before Iowa, this was 79 percent, but it has decreased to 66 percent in the most recent data collection. This decrease follows a narrow Clinton win in Iowa and significant loss in New Hampshire. After two contests, Democrats think Bernie Sanders has an increasingly good chance of being the party’s nominee.
This change, however, is somewhat misleading. It lumps all Democrats together regardless of whom they support. It could be the case that Clinton’s supporters have less faith that she can win, or Sanders’ backers are more confident he can succeed.
In fact, the first figure below shows the latter is the case. More than 90 percent of Clinton supporters in each week think she will be the party’s nominee, with a high of 97 percent in early January and a low of 93 percent last week.
In contrast, more than 57 percent of Sanders’ supporters thought Clinton would win when asked in early January, and only 41 percent thought Sanders would be the nominee. But we have seen a reversal after Iowa and New Hampshire. Last week’s poll shows Sanders backers believing he will win the nomination by a 2-to-1 margin. This means that Sander’ rise in perceived viability is a result of his supporters becoming more convinced that he has a chance to win.









