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Young voters, Black voters and female voters have all moved significantly since Kamala Harris replaced Joe Biden in the 2024 race. Latinos, seniors and independents have stayed relatively still.
The poll, released Saturday from The New York Times and Siena College, found that almost 80 percent of likely Black voters would vote for Harris if the presidential election were held today, and ...
The USA Today/Suffolk University poll found that among Black voters — who backed the Biden-Harris ticket over the Trump-Pence Republican ticket 92% to 8% in 2020 — 1 in 5 said they would ...
On July 21, 2024, Biden withdrew from the presidential campaign and endorsed his vice president, Kamala Harris, who shortly thereafter became the official nominee of the Democratic Party. Kamala Harris vs. Donald Trump
October 9–11, 2024 40% 56% 4% 2,010 online Registered voters [99] Gallup: October 1–12, 2024 39% 56% 5% 1,023 telephone All adults [100] Harris (for Harvard University) October 11–13, 2024 42% 55% 3% 3,145 online Registered voters [101] Beacon/Shaw & Company (for Fox News) October 11–14, 2024 40% 59% 0% 1,110 phone/online Registered ...
Acc ording to CNN exit polls, women voters leaned toward Harris by 10 points, but not at the levels they did for Joe Biden in 2020 or Hillary Clinton in 2016. Meanwhile, Trump gained in his ...
The Democrats lost votes among Latino men, Black men and even young voters. How shifts among key demographic voting groups sealed Trump’s 2024 election victory Skip to main content
The race remains essentially tied, with Harris and Trump each getting 43% support in an aggregate of last month's polls. Biden and Trump each had 40% in the polls conducted in the previous two months.