Two possible explanations for why Harris’s poll numbers have begun to plateau and how we should think about the race ahead of Tuesday’s debate.
Former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are virtually tied in a New York Times/Siena College survey, with Trump taking a one-point lead for the first time since early August, ending Harris’ streak of major polling wins as the presidential race remains extremely close.
The TV audience for the Harris-Trump matchup was roughly comparable to the second Trump-Clinton debate in 2016.
As Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump prepare to debate, this is how the polls look.
The poll, conducted by On Point/Red Eagle Politics/SoCal Strategies among 719 likely voters show 48% said they plan to vote for Harris compared to 45% who are backing Trump. Among those who watched the debate, 53% said they Harris won compared to 34% who thought Trump won.
The morning after Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump’s first debate, it is far from clear if Trump will agree to a rematch.
Ex-President Donald Trump is equivocating over the possibility of a second debate with Kamala Harris after his dud display in their first showdown prompted his team and conservative media allies to mount a frantic cleanup operation.
Fred Trump III says his uncle is going “absolutely insane” as Kamala Harris rises in the polls. “All bets are off now, he is going to go nuts on people.”
In three major polls released the day after the debate, an average of 57 percent of respondents say Kamala Harris won.
Recent polling reveals a tightly contested race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, who faced off in what could be their only debate in Philadelphia last night. While Harris leads in most national polls,
Follow here for live news updates, reactions and analysis of the presidential debate between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris.