America in Focus: These Nine Men Voted for Biden in 2020. How Do They See Him Now? Laura Reston, Margie Omero & Adrian J. Rivera, New York Times [unlocked] In 2020, men were almost evenly divided between Donald Trump and Joe Biden — a remarkable shift from 2016, when they backed Mr. Trump by 11 points. That swing was decisive enough to put Mr. Biden in the White House. Another shift in men’s votes may well determine the outcome of this election, too. For the latest Times Opinion focus group, we gathered nine men who voted for Mr. Biden in 2020 to see how their views about him evolved since then. | An audio recording of the session
Independents, Third-Party Candidates Loom As Election Deciders In 2024: I&I/TIPP Poll Terry Jones, Issues & Insights The race between President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump remains tight, with Biden holding an ever-so-slight edge over Trump in a head-to-head election. But that changes when you add independent and third-party challengers into the mix, April’s I&I/TIPP Poll shows. Latino Americans aren’t favorable to Trump or Biden, but feel the Democratic Party better represents them Ipsos Heading into the 2024 presidential election, Latino Americans view both President Joe Biden and former President Donald Trump unfavorably, according to the findings of a new Axios/Ipsos poll conducted in partnership with Noticias Telemundo of over 1,000 Latino/Hispanic Americans. The poll also finds that Latinos tend to prefer Trump when it comes to the economy, crime, and immigration, but prefer Biden when it comes to abortion issues.
Biden's popularity with Latinos drops as Dems' rises Russell Contreras, Axios U.S. Latinos have steadily soured on President Biden while warming to former President Trump — even as they're trending toward Democrats on several key issues, according to the latest Axios-Ipsos Latino Poll in partnership with Noticias Telemundo. Inflation Expectations are Mixed; Consumers Express Concerns about Retaining and Finding Jobs Federal Reserve Bank of New York The Federal Reserve Bank of New York’s Center for Microeconomic Data today released the March 2024 Survey of Consumer Expectations, which shows inflation expectations remained unchanged at the short-term horizon, increased at the medium-term horizon, and decreased at the longer-term horizon. Labor market expectations were also mixed.