Where Trump generally has an advantage in arguing for his outsider status is when he talks about his experience in the private sector. In polling, Trump is regularly seen as better able to get the economy humming than Hillary Clinton, with the CNN-ORC poll released this week giving Trump a 15-point advantage on the issue. That's important because jobs and the economy are regularly cited as the most important issue in the minds of voters (as is also the case in that CNN poll).

On Tuesday, The Washington Post released the results of a massive poll conducted in all 50 states, revealing where voters preferred which presidential candidates. We also asked respondents which issue they saw as the most important to them at the moment. And in all 50 states, without exception, the top response was jobs and the economy.

The other options are ranked above by how commonly identified they were. Health care, terrorism and education were the others in the top four, followed by the environment, immigration and foreign policy. Let that sear into your brain for a second while we dive a little deeper into the numbers.

Although every state prioritized jobs first, the range of responses both for that issue and the other issues varied. Wyoming and West Virginia were much more worried about jobs and the economy than Washington and Utah. Washington and Utah were more worried about foreign policy than Wyoming, Louisiana and Mississippi. Kentucky and Tennessee were more worried about terrorism than Alaska and Vermont, which sort of makes sense and sort of doesn't. On the maps below, the states with dashed outlines were less likely than most states to rate the issue as important; those with solid boundaries were more likely to.

Notice that immigration isn't included there. That's because I want to focus on it for a second.

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Did you let the results above sear into your brain? Yes? If so, you may have noticed something fairly amazing: More states ranked the environment as a general priority than immigration. Donald Trump's signature issue is really not seen as that much of a priority. And what's more, the hotbeds of concerns are not where you'd think.

We broke out the immigration numbers in two ways below. The first is on the same scale as the six maps above; the second is relative to the maximum value just within the immigration issue.

The states most worried about immigration are North Dakota and Idaho. They are worried about ... Canadian immigration, I guess?

If we plot the number of foreign-born Hispanics who are not naturalized vs. the level of concern about immigration, there's some correlation: As one increases, so does the other. North Dakota and Idaho are clear outliers here. (The yellow line is the trend excluding North Dakota and Idaho.)

What's at play here? North Dakota is the state that offered the second-highest level of support to Trump in our poll, suggesting that perhaps support for the candidate is driving support for his signature issue. Wyoming was the most supportive state, and it had a relatively high level of concern about immigration, too. Idaho was the tenth-most supportive. Barring another explanation, this is probably the best we've got.

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But this brings me back to the point I made when Trump reprised his immigration positions during that speech in Phoenix last week (and, in fact, the month before that). Immigration voters are already mostly onboard with Trump. The growth opportunity lies in jobs and the economy and not in hammering his immigration platform once again. Heck, even taking a position on the environment would address more concerns at this point than more immigration talk.

In literally every state, voters want to hear the business guy outline a plan for how he'll address the economy. Every state. All 50. He's already done most of the hard work, convincing a majority of people (in that CNN poll) that his business background means he can do a better job with the economy than Clinton. Whether they think an outsider can actually get Washington to do what it's supposed to, Trump has the trust of voters on the issue they care about the most.