Former president Donald Trump is trailing nationally by six points in a new ABC poll, and Democratic presidential nominee and Vice President Kamala Harris has cut his lead in deep-red Iowa to just four points, says another poll. That, a pollster says, signals a big change in the electorate. (AP Photo | Alex Brandon) AP
Kamala Harris is leading Donald Trump in the popular vote according to six opinion polls conducted either after or during Tuesday's presidential debate between the two rivals in Philadelphia. The Democratic candidate had a lead of between two and five percentage points according to the survey, although several were within the margin of error.
Vice President Kamala Harris is opening a small advantage over former President Donald Trump following this week’s debate. According to a handful of new public opinion polls, Harris is leading anywhere between 2 percentage points and 5 percentage points,
Americans broadly pick Kamala Harris as the winner of last week's widely watched presidential debate – yet neither she nor Donald Trump moved the needle in polling.
In a post on his website, Truth Social, Trump continued to insist that he won the debate, despite his disastrous performance, and that because of this he does not need to do it again. “THERE WILL BE NO THIRD DEBATE,” Trump declared, referencing this week's debate and his earlier showdown with President Joe Biden.
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,
Donald Trump says he will not debate Kamala Harris again, claiming that polls show he won Tuesday night's debate.
Harris is up 50% to 45% over Trump in a Morning Consult survey conducted Wednesday of 3,317 likely voters, her widest lead yet in the group’s presidential election surveys and a slight improvement from her four-point lead in a survey taken on the day of the debate and from her three-point lead in pre-debate surveys.
A Reuters/IPSOS poll, which includes responses from 1,405 registered voters between Sept. 1 and Sept. 12, showed Harris leading Trump by five points, with 47% supporting Harris, 42% supporting Trump and 11% either undecided or planning to vote for a third-party candidate.
Maine's Second Congressional District might be the only obvious flip of an Electoral College vote since Kamala Harris took over as the Democratic nominee. It could matter.
New surveys of Michigan are the latest to show the race between Donald Trump and Kamala Harris is too close to call — and Michiganders’ concerns seem to put the former prez at an advantage.