I feel no confidence predicting a Trump victory, but will submit a few data points:
1) he seems to be ahead in the polls which had it right in 2016; it is past obvious that the left wing media lies for their people, and that even if they lose, they want reasons to riot. and to deny the legitimacy of Trump’s election.
2) There is little Biden can do to improve his numbers now other than spend money. He has no energy, and now has to face the prospect of questions about his son and, by extension, his own business dealings. And it is quite possible the revelations about his corruption will keep dropping until, and after, November 3rd. So I would say his position is little to gain, much to lose.
3) Trump can ONLY improve his chances between now and election day. After four years of 24/7 attacks, there is zero chance of unexpected and damaging revelations of any sort. And he is campaigning like a madman. He has little to lose, and much to gain, and CLEARLY has the energy and momentum.
4) What I have not seen anyone point out is that this election year is unlike any other since many Blue States–I think the number is 10–have pledged their electors to the winner of the Popular vote which, naturally enough since they cheat, they assumed would always fall to the Democrats. But what if it doesn’t? That turns all of them into Swing States, if they follow their own laws. Trump could lose Michigan and win California (although I think he will win Michigan). If Trump is able to win the Popular vote, then he could have one of the dominating victories since Reagan in 1984.
That would be a 1984 worth voting for.
My SWAG: 69 million votes for Trump, 64 million for Biden, with the real numbers about 72 million for Trump, and 61 million for Biden. I think people are tired of being bossed around by autocrats, told they can’t work, told this is the “new normal”, and fearful of everything that will happen if we elect a man whose corruption we know about already, and which–piled on top of his senility, stupidity, and lifetime of underachievement–makes for the worse Presidential candidate I can remember. Michael Dukakis had a much better resume, as did Walter Mondale.