According to the latest poll commissioned by CNN, Kamala Harris and Donald Trump have equal support – 47 percent each. This is the second recent survey to predict such a result.
Nationwide survey CNN was conducted on a representative group of 1,704 Americans from all over the country. This is another study that showed a tie in the poll. The poll shows that both candidates can count on 47 percent support.
“85 percent of likely voters who have already made their choice say they knew from the beginning which party they would support, and only 15 percent have changed their mind. Just two percent of likely voters have not yet chosen a candidate, and another nine percent say they may still change their mind before voting,” according to a CNN poll.
Poll also tied in the poll for “NYT”
The national poll published earlier on Friday also brought a tied result – 48 percent support each Siena College poll for The New York Times.
“Harris and Trump are tied even after three of the most tumultuous months in recent American political history. A high-profile debate, two attempts on Trump's life, dozens of rallies in seven battleground states and hundreds of millions spent on advertising appear to have done little to change the trajectory of the race.” noted the New York daily.
Harris leads in New Hampshire
Emerson College Polling released a survey of 915 New Hapshire voters on Friday. In this study Kamala Harris leads with Donald Trump – 50 to 47 percent.
Fifty-three percent of New Hampshire voters have a favorable opinion of Harris, while 47 percent have an unfavorable opinion. Trump gained 47 percent positive ratings and 53 percent negative ratings.
Harris wins among women, Trump among men
The newspaper points out that there are discrepancies in the evaluation of candidates depending on gender USA Today. In the latest USA TODAY/Suffolk University national poll, women overwhelmingly supported Harris (53 to 36 percent) and men backed Trump (53 to 37 percent). Most media outlets acknowledge that the margin of error in the very close poll results does not allow predicting who will actually be the winner in the November 5 elections. They also point out the importance of how the electorate will vote in seven swing states: Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Main photo source: DUSTIN SAFRANEK, CARLOS RAMIREZ/PAP/EPA