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Opinion Today

Opinion Today

September 13, 2024

Sep 13, 2024
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Harris maintains slight edge over Trump among voters nationwide
Ipsos
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll, conducted following the first presidential debate on September 10th, 2024, shows Democratic Presidential Candidate Kamala Harris maintaining her lead among registered voters over Republican Presidential Candidate Donald Trump. The survey also shows that half of registered voters believe Harris won the debate, and another half say that Harris gave the impression of having higher moral integrity than Trump.
Harris vs. Trump: Who is leading the polls?
Jason Lange, Reuters
Democratic U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris leads Republican Donald Trump 47% to 42% in the race to win the Nov. 5 presidential election, increasing her advantage after a debate against the former president that voters largely think she won, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll that closed on Thursday.

Kamala Harris' debate win hasn't yet won her new voters, but more like her and see her as qualified
Douglas Rivers, Mark Blumenthal, Carl Bialik & Taylor Orth, YouGov
A YouGov poll of 1,407 U.S. adults between September 10 - 11, 2024 — conducted for the Times and SAY24, a joint project of Stanford, Arizona State, and Yale Universities — shows how Americans perceive the first presidential debate between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, and how opinions of the two candidates changed after the widely watched event. Participants were interviewed before the debate and again afterwards.
Broad public support for some Supreme Court reforms
Annenberg Public Policy Center, University of Pennsylvania
Less than half of Americans can name most of the rights protected under the First Amendment and under two-thirds can name the three branches of government, according to the Annenberg Constitution Day Civics Survey, released annually since 2014. The 2024 civics survey also asked respondents for their views on measures that have been discussed to reform the Supreme Court. The survey found most Americans support four of six proposals.

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