shyams, on 2020-August-14, 08:59, said:
Main reason Biden is leading? He is not Trump.
What about policy/issues? Trump leads Biden 21-9
What about leadership? Trump leads Biden 23-19
Who is "for American people & values"? Trump leads Biden 17-6
This seems to me to be rather facile "analysis". The whole poll (and I've only seen your summary) is pitching apples against oranges, and these statements are promoting false equivalences.
I'm not pretending this late at night to provide any deep insights, but surely you have to start by recognising the very different current status of the two:
- Trump has been in the White House for the past 3 1/2 years, exercising what passes for "leadership", and pursuing his own agenda (which you will regard as issues / policy if you're a supporter). Additionally, he seems to spend at least half of his time tweeting various insults, numerous lies, and boasts with little grounding in reality, and by virtue of his position gets to have all this plastered all over the news and social media, including those ("fake", "nasty", etc) elements that are "stupid" enough to differ from him from time to time.
- In contrast, Biden was Obama's VP for 8 years; from our side of the pond it seems firmly to be the case that the President rather than the VP is the embodiment of the country's leadership both in general and in policy. The Democrats ran Hillary Clinton, not Biden, when Obama stepped down in 2016. Here in the UK there's a formal role of Leader of the Opposition; the US's nearest equivalent would seem to be the House / Senate leader, but only if either chamber has a majority for the non-Presidential party. This, and the whole political process of nomination races etc, means that there can have been no comparable standard-bearer role for Biden to have held for those 3 1/2 years. Whilst he's been prominent, his media exposure over these years also doesn't begin to equate to Trump's.
Given these marked contrasts, it's hardly surprising, for example, that "leadership" and "issues / policy" are going to weigh more heavily than other topics with Trump' supporters, and vice-versa for Biden's. Quite frankly, I'm astonished that "he isn't Biden" scores as high as it does with Trump's, and wonder if this is heavily weighted by those "leaning towards" rather than "supporting" him. I'd also be very surprised if a significant proportion of the pro-Biden pollees had a good grasp of his policy platform.
Given what an appalling President Trump has been, and the swathe of damage that he and his Senate enablers have done both to the US's institutions and to its standing with the rest of the world, it's also hardly surprising that the overwhelming reason given for voting for Biden is to sweep this all away: this is a phenomenon seen all over the world when a democracy realises that it's time for a change. Other important reasons are always going to be subservient to this imperative, and will score materially less in such polls as a result.
I don't see any significance in the "American people & values" differences, partly for that last reason, and partly because the deliberately divisive nature of Trump's pitch, that seeks to rally "true" Americans against the rest of you folks, is obviously designed to highlight this "issue" with his supporters.
Finally, the poll is presented here as if these constituencies are of equal size, and - mercifully - that doesn't seem at the moment quite to be the case. 19% of a larger number of Biden's supporters could well be a larger proportion of the whole population than 23% of Trump's (one can only hope).