I was not happy in 2023 when Biden decided to run. But at the same time it was a strange race, in that Harris was largely unknown. Who do we run? A governor? Of those 60% that turned up to vote maybe half had some idea who she was. The rest had a label: typical democrat.Domenico Montanaro is the "numbers cruncher" for PBS & NPR. He regularly reports on polls, trends, election results and the like. He takes a look back at the political year of 2024 and lists the significant number results that defined the year. The headline on his story reads, "A wild year in politics, by the numbers."
Here are some of the interesting "numbers" Montanaro describes.
155 million
"More than 155 million people cast ballots in the 2024 presidential election. It's second only in U.S. history to the 2020 election. Turnout in 2024 represented 63.9% of eligible voters, the second-highest percentage in the last 100 years, according to the University of Florida Election Lab. The only year that beat it – again – was 2020 when universal mail-in voting was more widely available."
71%
"The share of the electorate that white voters made up. This might be the most important number of the election because it represents an increase in the white share of the electorate, which hasn't happened since 1992. White voters have been on a steady decline since the turn of the century, with the increase of Latinos and AAPI voters, so for that to be reversed in this election is eye-popping and a big reason for Trump's win. Much of that extra boost came from white voters without college degrees, who went up 4 points as a share of the electorate and went two-thirds for Trump."
49.8%
"Trump's popular vote percentage. That's hardly an "unprecedented" and "powerful mandate," as Trump has claimed, but presidents often over-read their election victories — and just how much political capital they have."
38%
"President Biden's average approval rating just before Election Day. It's hard for the party in power to do well when their incumbent president's approval is that low. His age, 81, also factored greatly in whether he could win reelection or even stay in the race.
Anyway, Biden would not have won if he stayed in, even if tha disasterous debate never had happened.
Lesson: do not run any candidates that cannot run two terms.