The contest remains tight, with only a week to go before the US presidential election. President Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris are both trying to get as many votes as possible. Two national surveys done on Sunday gave Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump in new poll.
According to news from ABC News, Harris is among the likely voters. She enjoyed a 4-point lead over Trump (51% to 47%). However, on the CBS News/YouGov poll, Harris’ lead was just one point more than Trump’s. Because the survey indicated a 50% to 49% score.
Anyway, in previous polls, the difference was higher. The number of people in Washington who reported voting for Harris was two greater than the other candidates. While in a previous CBS poll, three more viewers favored her.
Harris has reiterated issues around the economy and reproductive rights in her final submissions to voters. And Trump has continued with his narrative on the issues of inflation and immigration at the US-Mexico border.
The most recent statistics regarding the ongoing support of women towards Harris are disclosed within ten days of the general elections.
As per the argument, Kamala Harris leads Donald Trump in new poll with women likely voters. It is 55 percent against Trump, who has 43 percent; as per the CBS news polls, Harris has a 12-point lead. Out of those women-limited registered voters, estimating about fifty-five percent said they would consider Harris as a good president. And the rest countered by stating that Harris would not be a strong president.
Nearly fifty-eight percent of men polled by CBS about their preferences stated controversial views favoring Trump over Harris. It allows the president a nine-point lead looking at prospective registered and non-registered voters. Around three percent of respondents thought the former president would make a strong leader, while thirty-six percent thought that he would not make a significant leader.
Fifty percent of respondents answered yes when asked whether they believed the Republican would dominate the input of the military as commander in chief. However, fifty percent of respondents believed he would be ineffective.