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Thursday, September 19, 2024

Harris leads Trump, 50% to 45%, in FAU national poll

Harris leads Trump, 50% to 45%, in FAU national poll

Vice President Kamala Harris leads former President Donald Trump, 50% to 45%, in a nationwide Florida Atlantic University poll released Thursday.

There has been little change in the last three weeks despite momentous events, including the Harris-Trump debate last week and the thwarted assassination attempt against Trump on Sunday.

In FAU’s previous national poll, released Aug. 27, the results were essentially the same: 49% for Harris and 45% for Trump.

“It could simply be that the race has become very static. Or it could be that the bounce from the (Democratic) convention started to decline a little bit and then the debate happened,” Wagner said. “It suggests that the gains that she made around the (convention) have carried into September.”

Even though the poll was conducted after the thwarted assassination attempt over the weekend at the Trump International Golf Course near West Palm Beach in Florida, FAU political scientist Kevin Wagner said the poll results may not reflect people’s views on what happened.

Wagner is also co-director of FAU’s PolCom Lab, a collaboration of the School of Communication and Multimedia Studies and Department of Political Science, which conducted the poll.

Initially, he said, it doesn’t appear as if there was an impact in public opinion. But he also said it sometimes takes time for people to sort out how they feel about a major event.

One big caveat to the national poll results: The presidential race isn’t a national contest. It’s a series of state by state competitions for electoral college votes, so a nationwide lead doesn’t necessarily mean a candidate will win the 270 electoral votes needed to win the presidency.

Just 3% of likely voters in the latest survey said they were undecided and 2% said they planned to vote for another candidate. In a close race, those voters’ choices — whether they show up, and if they do who they vote for — could make a difference in who wins the presidency.

If those voters actually show up, or if they shift to one candidate or another, that could make a difference in who wins the presidency.

The survey has a margin of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points, so either candidate could be doing somewhat better or worse.

FAU’s findings are in line with most recent high-caliber national polls. The New York Times national polling tracker on Thursday showed Harris with an average of 49% to 47% for Trump.

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