About a week ago, the New York Times reported that Donald Trump had received a briefing on his internal polls, the results of which were “devastating” for the president’s operation. Soon after, according to the article, the Republican directed his aides “to deny that his internal polling showed him trailing” former Vice President Joe Biden, despite the fact that the data showed exactly that.
Trump did not handle the Times‘ reporting well. In fact, he soon after insisted that the internal polling data was “fake,” “made up,” and that the results in question “don’t even exist.”
Yeah, about that…
Data from President Donald Trump’s first internal reelection campaign poll conducted in March, obtained exclusively by ABC News, showed him losing a matchup by wide margins to former Vice President Joe Biden in key battleground states.
Trump has repeatedly denied that such data exists.
The polling data, revealed for the first time by ABC News, showed a double-digit lead for Biden in Pennsylvania 55-39 and Wisconsin 51-41 and had Biden leading by seven points in Florida. In Texas, a Republican stronghold, the numbers showed the president only leading by two points.
NBC News obtained additional data from the internal polling report, which also painted a bleak picture for the GOP incumbent.
Brad Parscale, Trump’s campaign manager, conceded that the polling results — the ones his boss said were “fake,” “made up,” and non-existent — were real, but out of date.
Parscale added that his operation has seen “huge swings in the president’s favor” since that internal poll was conducted in March, which seems awfully hard to believe given the overall trajectory of Trump’s national standing.
But in case this weren’t a big enough fiasco, Team Trump has responded to these developments by shaking up his polling team.
President Donald Trump’s re-election campaign is cutting ties with some of its own pollsters after leaked internal polling showed the president trailing former Vice President Joe Biden in critical 2020 battleground states, according to a person close to the campaign. […]









