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Here's who's winning between Trump and Harris in the latest presidential polls

Here's who's winning between Trump and Harris in the latest presidential polls

Topline

The race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump remains a seemingly dead heat less than four weeks before the election, according to a series of polls this month. The latest poll showed Harris with a two-point lead.

Important facts

Trump trails Harris 51% to 49% in a Harvard CAPS/Harris poll of registered voters released Monday, after the two were tied in the groups' September poll.

Trump and Harris were tied at 48% among registered voters in a new NBC poll released Sunday, while an ABC/Ipsos poll also released Sunday shows Harris with a two-point lead (50% to 48) among likely voters %) has The ABC poll's margin of error is 2.5 points – a shift after both ABC and NBC showed Harris with a lead of about five points last month.

A CBS/YouGov poll released Sunday showed Harris leading Trump among likely voters 51% to 48% – slightly narrower than Harris' 52% to 48% lead last month – while Harris was in the contested seven States have a narrower lead of 50% to 49%.

Other polls show the vice president with a larger lead, although the race has tightened in recent weeks: Harris leads Trump by four points, 49% to 45%, in an Economist/YouGov poll of likely voters released Wednesday he outperformed him by a margin of 49% to 45%, five points (49% to 46%) in the Sept. 30 group poll.

Harris is leading Trump 49% to 46% in a New York Times/Siena poll Tuesday, the first time she has led Trump in the groups' poll since July.

Harris leads by five points in Morning Consult's weekly poll, also released Tuesday, consistent with her ranking in last week's Morning Consult poll.

Three other polls in the last month – a September 24 Quinnipiac poll, a September 19 New York Times/Siena poll and a September 24 CNN/SSRS poll – showed Trump and Harris tied, while Virtually all other polls show this ahead of Harris.

Harris has squandered Trump's lead over President Joe Biden since announcing her candidacy on July 21, although her lead has narrowed slightly over the past two months, peaking at 3.7 points in late August, according to FiveThirtyEight's weighted polling average.

Who is likely to win the election: Harris or Trump?

According to FiveThirtyEight's election forecast, Harris is favored to win 53 times out of 100, compared to 47 for Trump. Political analyst and statistician Nate Silver puts Harris' odds at 52.2/47.6 and writes that he has “never seen an election where the forecast was near 50/50 for longer.”

Big number

1.7. That's how many points Harris is ahead of Trump in the latest RealClearPolitics poll average. Meanwhile, FiveThirtyEight's average shows Harris with a 2.9-point lead, and Nate Silver has Harris with a three-point lead in his Silver Bulletin forecast.

How does Harris fare against Trump in swing states?

Most polls show Harris leading in Michigan, Pennsylvania, Wisconsin and Nevada, while Trump has an advantage in Arizona, North Carolina and Georgia, according to FiveThirtyEight's polling averages – but all seven swing states are in the single digits.

Surprising fact

An NBC News poll released Sept. 29 found that while Harris still leads Trump among Latinos, that lead is shrinking. The NBC News/Telemundo/CNBC poll, conducted Sept. 16-23 of 1,000 registered Latino voters, found that 54% supported Harris, compared to 40% who supported Trump and 6% who said , they weren't sure who they would vote for. Support for Harris is higher than it was when Biden ran against Trump, NBC said, but is still significantly lower than previous peaks for Democratic candidates, including a 36-point lead in the 2020 poll and a 50-point lead in the 2016 poll . The survey had a margin of error of +/-3.1 percentage points.

How did the debate affect the polls?

Polls leading up to the debate showed that Harris's rise in poll numbers appeared to have plateaued, including a Sept. 3-5 NPR/PBS/Marist poll of registered voters that showed Harris leading 49% to 48 % ahead of Trump, compared to a three-point lead in August. Most post-debate polls show that the majority of respondents believe Harris won the debate, but not enough to significantly affect the race between the two. A New York Times/Siena poll of likely voters released on September 19 found that the majority of voters across all demographic groups viewed Harris' performance in the September 10 debate positively. Overall, 67% said she did well, compared to 40% who said the same goes for Trump. In an ABC News/Ipsos poll conducted a few days after the Sept. 11-13 debate, Harris was up 52% ​​to 46% among likely voters and 51% to 47% among registered voters , essentially unchanged from her six-point lead among likely voters in ABC/Ipsos polls in late August and early August – even though 63% of Americans said Harris won the debate last week.

Important background

Biden dropped out of the race on July 21 after weeks of defying calls from his own party to end his re-election bid following his disastrous performance in the June 27 debate. He immediately endorsed Harris and she announced plans to seek the nomination. The party quickly coalesced around her, with 99% of Democratic delegates voting to formally nominate her in a virtual roll call before the Democratic National Convention in August. Harris named Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz as her running mate, weeks after Trump announced Ohio Sen. JD Vance as his pick for vice president. ABC News moderated the first debate between Harris and Trump on September 10 in Philadelphia. Harris' surge in the polls coincides with a surge in Democratic enthusiasm for the election, which has nearly doubled since Harris entered the race, from 46% in June to 85% now, while Republican enthusiasm is at 71%. stagnates. according to a Monmouth University survey released Aug. 14.

Further reading

New HarrisX/Forbes poll: Harris won the debate – but she largely didn't change voters' minds (Forbes)

Trump's lead over Biden and Harris widened after RNC poll finds HarrisX/Forbes (Forbes)

Here's how Kamala Harris performs against Trump in polls – while Biden drops out and supports Harris (Forbes)

Harris' lead over Trump remains unchanged after DNC, first poll results (Forbes)

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