538’s delegate benchmarks set a low bar for Trump tonight
In Iowa tonight, our delegate benchmarks suggest Trump needs to win just 12 of 40 delegates to be on track to win the overall majority by July. To do so he will need 30 percent of the vote (our average of polls has him getting 53 percent). Meanwhile, DeSantis and Haley need to win 22 and 26 delegates, respectively, in order to be on track to win the nomination. Either would have to beat their polls dramatically to win such tallies.
The difference in these projections boils down to where the candidates draw their strength from. Our model looks at polling, demographics and political data in every state to project how many delegates we can expect each candidate to win from every contest. We then adjust candidate support in each state until those projections add up to a majority of delegates — the threshold needed to win the nomination. DeSantis and Haley are more popular with moderate, college-educated and anti-Trump voters, who are overrepresented in early states. That means they need lots of delegates from those states to win. In contrast, thanks to strength among non-white and evangelical Republicans, Trump is projected to do better in states that vote later in the primary calendar. That means he can stay on track to win even with a poor performance, compared to his polls.
Of course, the outcome of tonight’s caucuses will also alter the shape of the race. For example, a bad showing for Trump could catapult his rivals to success in later states. Our benchmarks are not forecasts for those contests. Once we have results from each contest, or the polls change significantly, we will update our benchmarks for future states.