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October 22, 2024

Oct 22, 2024
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Harris and Trump tied amid battle for Latino and Black voters
Susan Page, Sudiksha Kochi & Maya Marchel Hoff, USA Today
Kamala Harris and Donald Trump are essentially tied as they head into the final stretch of the presidential campaign, an exclusive USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll finds, as the Democratic ticket scrambles to command the strong enthusiasm of Latino and Black voters. The survey puts Harris at 45%, Trump at 44%, a closer race than the poll found in August.

Harris leads Trump 2-1 among the earliest voters, many driven by abortion access
Susan Page, USA Today
Democrat Kamala Harris has a sweeping lead over Republican Donald Trump − among voters who have already cast their ballots, that is. A new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll shows the vice president leading the former president by 63%-34%, close to 2-1, among those who have already voted. That preference turns around among those who plan to wait until Election Day to vote, with Trump ahead 52%-35%.

The quiet power of third-party candidates: Here's how they could play a pivotal role on Election Day
David Paleologos, USA Today
According to our latest Suffolk University/USA TODAY poll, the race is essentially tied among likely voters in our 5-way ballot test. Democrat Kamala Harris (45%) leads Republican Donald Trump (44%), Independent Cornel West (1%), Green Party candidate Jill Stein (1%), and Libertarian Chase Oliver (1%), with 5% still undecided and 3% refusing to respond.

Harris and Trump locked in dead heat in seven-state poll, with some voters still deciding
Scott Clement, Emily Guskin, Dan Keating and Dan Balz, Washington Post [unlocked]
Former president Donald Trump shows strength in Arizona while Vice President Kamala Harris runs strongest in Georgia, according to a Post-Schar School survey.
Trump, Harris Favorability on Low End of 68-Year Trend
Jeffrey M. Jones, Gallup
About half of U.S. adults rate Donald Trump and Kamala Harris positively on a 10-point favorability scale. This puts them on the lower end of what Gallup has measured using this rating scale for presidential nominees dating back to 1956. Trump’s current rating is similar to what he received in 2020 but significantly better than his 36% positive score in 2016, which is the record low.

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