FiveThirtyEight

(UPDATE, Feb. 4, 5:45 p.m.): This article has been updated with a new CNN poll.

MANCHESTER, N.H. — The FiveThirtyEight political team has just landed in New Hampshire, where we were hoping to get a clearer picture of the post-Iowa polling landscape. Instead, there are mixed signals. The signs generally show upward movement for Marco Rubio and Ted Cruz and downward movement for Donald Trump, but the magnitude of the shift differs from poll to poll and Trump remains favored to win here.

You also might notice that the pollsters who have weighed in so far are not the most highly rated group, as measured in our rankings. That happens sometimes; the first pollsters in the field after a big event aren’t always the best ones. But here’s what we have to work with:

In terms of non-polling indicators, Rubio has picked up quite a few endorsements. And the post-Iowa media environment seems changed. Rubio and Cruz are now much closer to Trump in Google search volume, especially in New Hampshire where the three candidates have become almost equal in search traffic. The empirical value of Google search data is something that we haven’t studied fully, but in Iowa it may have been a leading indicator that Rubio and Cruz were gaining ground.

So while we’re mostly taking a wait-and-see approach — there’s not a lot of post-Iowa polling data and certainly not a lot of highly reliable post-Iowa polling data — I feel reasonably comfortable with the following three conclusions:

There can be huge differences between the polls and the actual results, as we saw before with Hillary Clinton’s upset New Hampshire primary win in 2008 or (even more dramatically) Gary Hart’s in 1984: Hart took 37 percent of the state’s Democratic vote despite polling at just 21 percent. Finally, there’s the potential for late-breaking news, with a Republican debate set for Saturday night and 2012 New Hampshire winner Mitt Romney reportedly considering a potentially needle-moving endorsement. We’ll have a lot more for you over the course of the next six days.

Check out our live coverage of the Democratic debate.


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