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| Donald Trump Dealt Quadruple Polling Blow Within 48 Hours |
Former President Donald Trump has been dealt a quadruple polling blow as Vice President Kamala Harris continues to surge ahead of November's 2024 election.
Across six national polls released on Tuesday and Wednesday, Trump trailed behind Harris in four and led in two. Harris was up by 4 percentage points in a Civiqs survey, 3 points in a Leger survey, 2 points in a YouGov survey and a point in an Ispos survey. Trump, on the other hand, had a 2-point advantage in a McLaughlin poll and a 2.6-point advantage in an ActiVote poll.
The polls suggest that
the Democratic shake up prompted by President Joe Biden's
withdrawal from the race is working for the party. The 2024 race has quickly
become much closer in polling with Harris at the top of the ticket than it was
with Biden.
Newsweek has contacted the Trump and Harris
campaigns via email.
Even though Cook Political Report's latest national average, which was released Wednesday, showed Trump ahead by 1.3 points, it also showed Harris was able to halve Trump's lead, cutting it down from the 2.7 points the former president was ahead against Biden.
The Leger poll, which
found Harris with a 3-point advantage over Trump in a head-to-head, showed
Harris with her biggest margin yet when other candidates were taken into
account. The vice president led Trump by 7 points, with 48
percent support to his 41 percent with independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. leading
third-party candidates at 5 percent. This marked a significant decrease in the
number of voters who say they would support a third-party candidate, from 12
percent in June to 5 percent in July. The Leger poll was conducted between July
26 to July 28 among 1,002 people and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.1
percentage points.
The Civiqs poll, which showed Trump trailing Harris by 4 points, showed Harris with strong support among voters aged 18 through 49, while Trump did better among those aged 50 and older. Harris had a higher favorability rating than both Trump and his running mate, Ohio SenatorJD Vance, with 43 percent holding a favorable opinion of the vice president, 42 percent saying the same of Trump and 34 percent saying so of Vance.
The survey also indicated that the majority of Democrats were
glad Biden left the presidential race and that overall, half of Americans think
Harris has a better chance at defeating Trump. However, more voters, 45
percent, still predicted Trump would win, compared to 42 percent who expected
Harris to prevail. The Civiqs poll was conducted between July 27 and July 30
among 1,
registered voters and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3
percentage points.
The
YouGov survey marked the first time since November that the pollster recorded a
Democratic candidate leading by more than one point over Trump. In the last
survey, conducted before Harris replaced Biden, Trump led by 2 points. Thursday's
poll shows Harris bringing Democrats up 4 points and holding the advantage over
Trump, with 46 percent to his 44 percent. The poll was conducted between July
27 to July 30 among 1,605 adults and has a margin of error of plus or minus 3
percentage points.
While the Ispos poll showed Harris in the lead
by one point, it was a slight dip for the vice president who was leading over
Trump by 2 points last week. It also found that Harris has been able to improve
her standing among Americans, lifting her favorability rating from 40 percent
on July 2 to 46 percent by the end of the month. This poll was conducted
between July 26 to July 28 among 1,025 people and has a margin of error of plus
or minus 3.5 percentage points.

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