New polls show that the candidates Democrats And Republicans For the US presidential elections They are competing very closely, less than a month before the vote.
According to three opinion polls released yesterday, Sunday, there is progress Kamala Harris on Donald Trump It diminished or disappeared altogether as the race for the White House approached the final stage.
In the latest poll conducted by NBC News, the Democratic and Republican candidates were tied at the national level at 48% before the vote on November 5, which is a decrease of 5 percentage points compared to the same poll last month.
ABC News/Ipsos also conducted a poll that showed Harris leading by 50% compared to 48% among potential voters, which is also a decline for Harris, who was ahead by 52% compared to 46% in the same poll last month.
The third poll was conducted by CBS News in cooperation with YouGov, a company specializing in market research and opinion polls, and showed that Harris led by 51% versus 48% among potential voters, compared to a difference of 4 percentage points last month.
According to the latest figures, Harris is ahead by about 1.4 percentage points in the main opinion polls, compared to 2.2% last Saturday, and this comes amid concerns among Democrats that Harris will fail to strengthen support among Hispanics and African Americans, two of the party’s main electoral groups. .
While Harris leads among women of all races, she has had difficulty generating enthusiasm among men, including African Americans and Hispanics, who have increasingly gravitated toward Trump in recent years.
In opinion polls conducted by The New York Times and Siena College and published on Saturday and Sunday, Harris received the support of 78% of black voters and 56% of Hispanic voters, which are much lower percentages than those obtained by Democratic candidates in the 2020 and 2016 elections.
Trump saw an increase in support from potential black voters, with about 15% of them saying they plan to vote for him, an increase of 6 points compared to 4 years ago.
According to a New York Times poll, much of the erosion in Harris’ support is due to a growing belief that Democrats, who have long celebrated black voters as the “backbone” of their party, have failed to deliver on their promises.