How The 2020 Democratic Odds Compare To Post-Debate Polls, Pundits

So, which Democratic presidential hopeful won the latest showdown?

It’s not always easy to tell what’s going to move the needle in a given candidate’s direction, but debates are considered a decent indicator of how the country will respond in the next batch of national polls.

Of course, major news sites often get a jump on those polls by running their own informal reader polls in the wake of major televised political events. Several outlets have done just that for the third Democratic debate that aired last night on ABC.

Bookmakers pay attention to these polls, as do bettors who pour their money into whichever candidate they think performed best on stage. As such, the DNC election odds have shifted at several betting sites thanks to last night’s three-hour marathon of policy and pandering.

Online betting site Bovada was among the first books to change its odds after the conclusion of the third DNC event. Debate participants are listed below in bold, with each candidate’s pre-debate odds included in parentheses.

2020 Democratic Nomination Odds

Per Bovada’s Democratic Odds

  • Elizabeth Warren +175 (+200)
  • Joe Biden +275 (+250)
  • Bernie Sanders +575 (+550)
  • Kamala Harris +700 (+600)
  • Andrew Yang +1000 (-)
  • Pete Buttigieg +1000 (-)
  • Cory Booker +4000 (-)
  • Tulsi Gabbard +4000 (-)
  • Beto O’Rourke +6600 (+5000)
  • Amy Klobuchar +7500 (-)
  • Julián Castro +7500 (-)
  • Tom Steyer +10000 (-)
  • Marianne Williamson +10000 (-)
  • Michael Bennet +12500 (-)
  • Bill de Blasio +15000 (-)
  • John Delaney +15000 (-)
  • Robby Wells +20000 (-)

As you can see, per US sportsbooks and bettors, Elizabeth Warren was the overall winner of the latest debate, with her odds shrinking from +200 to +175 to win the DNC nomination.

Joe Biden and Bernie Sanders slipped a bit, Kamala Harris slipped even more, and Beto O’Rourke was the biggest loser of the night. The rest of the field – including Andrew Yang, Pete Buttigieg, Cory Booker, Amy Klobuchar, and Julian Castro – held steady.

That said, online polling in the immediate aftermath of the debate tells a dramatically different story, with Andrew Yang being the overwhelming winner at many outlets.

Oddly, Yang had his highest approval ratings at decidedly conservative news websites, while establishment candidates were upheld at traditional left and center-left networks.

Yang’s popularity among Republican readers can likely be explained in two main ways. First, the guy might be so radical in many of his platforms that the political Right views him as the smallest threat to dethrone President Donald Trump in the 2020 general election. Alternatively, he might be the calmest, most reasonable voice in a rabid crowd of crazy.

In many ways, the #YangGang might be this cycle’s #FeelTheBern.

Here is a brief rundown of the mainstream media’s polls and analyses of the event. Note that the major left-leaning networks have not published reader polls, deferring to in-house analysts to format and guide the DNC narrative.

ABC News

ABC didn’t run a reader poll, but it does offer several “key takeaways” (including your scary black AR-15).

Breitbart

The biggest right-wing site on the Internet, Breitbart runs polls for just about everything. Per the aforementioned trend, Yang is the top choice by far, with Biden, Klobuchar, Sanders, and Warren each well behind him.

  • Yang: 30.77%
  • Biden: 17.7%
  • Klobuchar 15.5%
  • Sanders 10.93%
  • Warren 6.13%
  • O’Rourke 5.5%
  • Castro 5.02%
  • Buttigieg 3.45%
  • Booker 3.29%
  • Harris 1.7%

CBS News

CBS News didn’t publish a reader poll, but they’ve got some video analysis. By all means, watch it if you’ve got nothing better to do.

CNN

With nary a poll to be found, CNN helpfully put together a list of debate winners and losers. Nearly half of the candidates on stage – including Booker, Buttigieg, Klobuchar, and Sanders – apparently weren’t worth mentioning.

Winners

  • Biden
  • O’Rourke
  • Obama (not actually a candidate)
  • Harris

Losers 

  • Castro
  • Yang
  • Warren
  • The Economy (not even a person)

Drudge Report

While the Drudge Report is a link aggregator and not a proper news outlet, the right-wing site ran a reader poll right after the debate. The results overwhelmingly favored Yang, with Biden and Klobuchar taking second and third, respectively.

  • Yang – 35%
  • Biden – 22%
  • Klobuchar – 14%
  • Warren – 7%
  • Buttigieg – 5%
  • Sanders – 5%
  • O’Rourke – 4%
  • Booker – 3%
  • Castro – 3%
  • Harris – 2%

Fox News

The mainstream frontrunners – Biden, Warren, and Sanders – were each simultaneous winners and losers per Fox News’ Fair and Balanced™ reporting. Center-right Fox seems convinced that one of these three candidates will take the DNC nomination and has deemed the remaining field irrelevant.

MSNBC/NBC

Another mainstream left-wing site (or two), another deferral to “analysts” instead of readers. Of course, who needs a poll with such a fine group of upstanding individuals?

Winners 

  • Biden
  • Booker
  • Buttigieg
  • Castro
  • Harris
  • Klobuchar
  • O’Rourke
  • Sanders
  • Warren
  • Yang

Losers

  • At MSNBC/NBC, there’s no such thing as a Democrat loser because all Democrats are winners!

New York Times

The NYT’s debate coverage is hiding behind a pay/subscriber wall, but if you’re willing to sign up for emails and/or give them some money, you can read about how the mainstream Democrat frontrunners blew their competition away.

Winners

  • Warren
  • Sanders
  • Biden
  • Harris

Losers

  • Castro
  • O’Rourke
  • Booker
  • Klobuchar
  • Buttigieg
  • Yang

Politico

At left-leaning Politico, Booker, Buttigieg, and Castro apparently weren’t worth a mention. Amusingly, Politico brazenly double-dipped on certain candidates, putting them in both the win and loss columns.

Winners

  • O’Rourke
  • Biden*
  • Harris
  • Sanders
  • Warren
  • Yang*

Losers

  • Biden*
  • Klobuchar
  • Yang*

Other reasonably well-trafficked political outlets also weighed in on the issue.

Heavy, a far-left “edgy” site primarily aimed at American youth, published a poll with results strongly favoring Yang at 30.96 percent. Sanders took second with 20.37 percent, and Biden was third with 12.76 percent.

Of DC’s two in-house rags, the conservative-leaning Washington Examiner ran a reader poll, with Yang crushing the field with 48.46 percent of respondents favoring his politics. Sanders was next at 14.21 percent, with Biden taking third at 10.2 percent. Warren was fourth at 7.8 percent.

Meanwhile, the left-wing Washington Post boldly declared that “nobody” won the third debate. If you want to read their reasoning, the article is conveniently accessible behind a paywall.

So that’s the roundup, folks.

If you were hoping that any particular candidate would separate himself or herself from the pack, you’re probably disappointed. (Albeit Beto did kind of manage the feat, just in the wrong direction.)

The biggest story here, of course, is that Yang has managed to solidify his status as a legitimate top-tier contender, dunking on his competition as the most Googled candidate throughout the debate.

John Lloyd:

John's passion for political betting emerged when he joined our team to write news and content for PresidentialElectionOdds.net. His laid back disposition allows him to write about politics, even the nitty-gritty topics, without getting too emotionally worked up or compromised.

John's skills allow him to also perform as one of our lead web developers for this site. When John isn't writing about politics or jazzing up our site, he spends time as a musician and songwriter and performs professionally throughout the South East region of the US.

John hails from south GA and has lived in Georgia for most of his life. His gifts as a talented performer allow him to bring a strong creative element to the table.

John can be reached by email: John@presidentialelectionodds.net