As a member of the Times Opinion graphics department, I share the privilege of presenting complex ideas and arguments visually to our readers. Sometimes it's difficult — the story is too abstract or there is too little data to work with. This presidential election is the opposite kind of story — a story so materially complicated and so rich with data that it practically calls out to be made sense of through a visual medium. To break down the paths to victory for Kamala Harris, Donald Trump and (earlier this year) President Biden, for example, we made several Electoral College interactives with the Democratic strategist Doug Sosnik. In 2020, President Biden won by an extremely narrow margin in key swing states — less than 45,000 votes, according to some estimates — so we worked with the Republican pollster Patrick Ruffini to explore the microcommunities that could decide the election. With political ad spending at historic levels this cycle, my graphics colleague Gus Wezerek showed us how Democrats dominated the airwaves in his unique analysis of 3.5 million political TV ads that aired this fall. Finally, we explored the gender gap in this election, which may end up being the largest of any presidential contest. As the pollsters Celinda Lake and Amanda Iovino argue, this gender gap is being driven largely by education — with college-educated women on one side and non-college-educated men on the other. We hope you will join us for much more analysis as Election Day unfolds.
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Saturday, November 2, 2024
Opinion Today: How the election may shape up, in graphs
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