A pretty good indicator of a possible hidden hispanic vote for Hillary. Most polls don't use Spanish so some had speculated there is a hidden Latino vote that may emerge.
The RCP Avg in Nevada going in is + 2.0 for Trump.
So far Dems "have an edge of 46,000 votes, or 6 points. That's roughly the same as Obama's 48,000-vote lead after early voting in 2012 -- which grew when more Democrats than Republicans turned out on Election Day. Nevada could be 2016's best test of polls against early voting data. A CNN/ORC poll out this week found Donald Trump ahead of Hillary Clinton, 49% to 43%". (Source)
Clearly if Ralston's data is to be believed, the Hispanic turnout has not only been massive, it as not been screened in the polls leading up the final week, which has created a facade that Trump was ahead in the state.
So the question then becomes, if this was the case in NV, then what about other Hispanic heavy states like AZ, FL, TX, and CO ?
The RCP Avg in Nevada going in is + 2.0 for Trump.
So far Dems "have an edge of 46,000 votes, or 6 points. That's roughly the same as Obama's 48,000-vote lead after early voting in 2012 -- which grew when more Democrats than Republicans turned out on Election Day. Nevada could be 2016's best test of polls against early voting data. A CNN/ORC poll out this week found Donald Trump ahead of Hillary Clinton, 49% to 43%". (Source)
Clearly if Ralston's data is to be believed, the Hispanic turnout has not only been massive, it as not been screened in the polls leading up the final week, which has created a facade that Trump was ahead in the state.
So the question then becomes, if this was the case in NV, then what about other Hispanic heavy states like AZ, FL, TX, and CO ?