You’ve probably already OD’d on reading about Friday’s cryptic Comey memo, which re-opened the email can of worms (if only to reveal the can was empty), from every legal and messaging angle. I don't have anything to add about it from those perspectives, so I’ll just stay in my lane here and answer the questions about “what does this do to the polls?!?” It’s a pretty simple answer, though: nothing so far. The Daily Kos Elections model is still holding steady in the mid-90s, currently giving Hillary Clinton 96 percent odds of victory according to Monday’s numbers.
It shouldn't be hard to see why: a) many people simply haven’t heard the story (believe it or not, most people don’t follow the news as obsessively as your average Daily Kos reader), focusing instead on football or on earning enough money to survive or simply having a life on the weekend; b) many people who’ve heard the story just walked away from it with more question marks than they had before; and most importantly c) thanks to the intense levels of political polarization in today’s society, most people who fully digested the story already made up their minds long ago, and what few truly undecided swing voters still remain are more likely to be making their last-minute decisions based on their own personal economic situations or the ol’ “have a beer with” test, instead of the baffling sequel to a story that was highly technical and boring the first time around.
(There’s also: d) 21 million people have already voted, which we’ll discuss in more detail shortly. And while the early voters are probably the most hardcore partisans of the electorate, the ones least likely to be swayed by a story like this, that’s still possibly 1/5th of the electorate (there were about 125 million votes cast in 2012) that is already locked in.)