Democratic presidential candidate Kamala Harris is leading Republican candidate Donald Trump in the run-up to the November 5 election, according to an Ipsos poll released Thursday. Reuters to attest.
As the index reported, and according to the results of the latest public opinion polls, it seems that Kamala Harris may have made a turning point in the battle between the Democratic and Republican parties in America. While the Vice President’s popularity was lower than that of Republican candidate Donald Trump before President Joe Biden’s resignation, according to some polls, by the beginning of last August, he had already pushed the former US President behind him. Real poll and Thirty five and eight According to his August summary, the former indicated a 0.2% lead for Democrats, while the latter indicated a larger lead of about 2%.
The current vice president has increased his lead since the July 22-23 Reuters/Ipsos poll, in which he led the Republican nominee by 34 percent to 37 percent, according to the newly released poll. August 2-7, according to a national survey of 2,045 U.S. adults
Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump by 5 percentage points, with the vice president's support at 42 percent, while Donald Trump's popularity is at 37 percent.
Four percent of those surveyed supported independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr., up from 10 percent in July. Unlike the previous time, the August poll was conducted independently of Reuters by Ipsos, and the online poll had a margin of error of about three percentage points.
Joe Biden may have made a good decision.
Joe Biden, the 46th President of the United States, announced his withdrawal from the presidential race last July, while his rival Donald Trump was officially chosen as the party's presidential candidate at the Republican Party convention held in Milwaukee just one day after he announced the assassination attempt on him.
The Democratic Party announced last week that Kamala Harris, who ran unopposed, had secured the 2,350 delegates needed to secure the nomination in a virtual vote, officially making her the party’s nominee. Before Joe Biden’s resignation, the vice president’s popularity had been steadily lagging behind Republican candidate Donald Trump’s confident lead, but according to the latest polls, a close race could decide who will be the next president of the United States.
In a separate poll by Ipsos, Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump by 42 percent to 40 percent in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where the elections were the closest in 2020.
According to an August poll by the pollster, more voters associate the Republican campaign's regular “patriot” with Trump than with Harris, but the same is true of the Democratic campaign's latent “outsider.”
Polls comparing the Harris-Trump pairing to the previous Biden-Trump pairing show mostly the same pro-Democrat trend. According to battleground state data, Harris has consistently improved on Joe Biden’s previous performance, with the vice president particularly popular among young, black and Latino voters.