Robert Israel already answered, below is a short self-contained argument.
We have $$\left(1+x+\frac{x^2}{2!}+\dots+\frac{x^n}{n!}\right)e^{-x}=\frac{1}{n!}\int_x^{\infty}e^{-t}t^ndt.$$
We immediately see that it suffices to consider $x=n$, and, taking into account that $n!=\int_{0}^{\infty} e^{-t}t^ndt$, we may rewrite our inequality as
$$
\int_n^{\infty}e^{-t}t^ndt>\int_0^{n}e^{-t}t^ndt,
$$
denoting $t=ns$ we rewrite this as
$$
\int_1^{\infty}e^{-ns}s^nds>\int_0^{1}e^{-ns}s^nds.
$$
I claim that $$e^{-(1+x)}(1+x)>e^{-(1-x)}(1-x)\,\,\forall x\in (0,1).\,\,(*)$$ Taking $n$-th power of $(*)$ and integrating over $[0,1]$ we get that even
$$
\int_1^{2}e^{-ns}s^nds>\int_0^{1}e^{-ns}s^nds.
$$
For proving $(*)$ we rewrite it as $(1+x)/(1-x)>e^{2x}$ and expand both parts as power series of $x$: $$1+2x+2x^2+2x^3\dots>1+2x+2x^2+(2^3/3!)x^3+(2^4/4!)x^4+\dots,$$ this is clear.