- by foxnews
- 28 Nov 2024
A new USA TODAY/Suffolk University Poll places Harris at 45% and Trump at 44%.
Harris has fallen back in support among Latino and Black voters in the seven weeks between surveys. The new poll found Latino voters now back Trump by 49% to 38%. Black voters prefer Harris by 72% to 17%, but that 55-point edge is significantly less than the advantage Democrats traditionally enjoy.
For the subsamples of Latino and Black voters, the survey's margins of error are plus or minus 9 points, signaling possible repositioning of up to 18 points in one direction or the other.
President Biden benefited from staggering support from Black and Latino voters four years ago. A Pew Research Center analysis found 92% of Black voters and 59% of Latino voters supported Biden in the 2020 race.
Observing the shift in Democrats' traditional edge, the Harris campaign unveiled an economic agenda for Black men last week. It promised small business loans and the legalization of recreational marijuana.
In a separate poll conducted across seven battleground states, 47% of respondents said they would definitely or probably back Harris, while 47% said they would definitely or probably support Trump. According to the Washington Post-Schar School survey, 49% of likely voters support Harris, while 48% support Trump.
Among swing states, Trump is performing well in Arizona, while Harris fares best in Georgia.
The poll also surveyed a portion of the electorate in the swing states dubbed "deciders" - people who have not fully committed to a candidate. About 74% of voters in the swing states said they would definitely vote for Harris or Trump - an increase from the 58% who said they had already decided in the spring.
Over a five-month period, uncommitted voters narrowed from 42% to 26%. The latest survey showed 21% of likely voters across the seven states were not fully committed to either Harris or Trump.
According to an Associated Press-NORC Center for Public Affairs Research (AP-NORC) poll released on Monday, most registered voters are divided on whether Trump or Harris are better equipped to handle specific economic issues, including unemployment, the cost of groceries and housing, or tariffs.
The survey found only 38% of registered voters say the national economy is doing well, while 62% of respondents expressed believing the economy is in poor condition.
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