Analysis: Voters don’t care about boogeyman Trump
Tuesday night should serve as a warning that such a strategy doesn’t look like it’ll work in elections to come. Biden, not Trump, is the President now, and how voters feel about him is paramount.
Put another way: Views of the sitting president dictate how people vote downballot. This year hasn’t been an exception to that rule.
Of course, Trump himself remains unpopular. He had a 42% favorable to 54% unfavorable rating in Virginia. His standing was, in other words, actually slightly worse than Biden’s in the state. Again, this is what we see nationally, too.
In Virginia, most voters (84%) liked at least either Biden or Trump. Those who approved of Biden and had an unfavorable view of Trump went 96% to 4% to Democrat Terry McAuliffe. Those who held a favorable view of Trump and disapproved of Biden went 98% to 1% for Youngkin.
The key bloc was the significant chunk (16%) who liked neither one. It was this 16% who determined the election.
Youngkin won these voters by a 2-to-1 margin (68% to 32%). Had these voters broken evenly, McAuliffe would have won this race by a small but comfortable margin.
These voters are overwhelmingly independent. Among all Virginia voters, 31% said they were independent or something else. Among the crowd that liked neither Biden nor Trump, 57% were. Independents, overall, swung wildly in Virginia, going from Biden winning them by 19 points to Youngkin winning them by 9.
The dynamic in Virginia this time around was very reminiscent of what happened in the 2016 election. Democrats were counting on the fact that Trump was more disliked than Hillary Clinton to carry them over the finish line. As in this race, there were more voters who held a favorable view of the Democrat (43%) than of Trump (38%).
The key group in 2016 was the 22% who held a favorable view of neither Clinton or Trump. Trump won this group by 15 points and, with them, the presidency.
If Biden remains unpopular through 2022, expect this dynamic to repeat itself.
![]()

