Former President Donald Trump has a 2-point lead over Vice President Kamala Harris in Pennsylvania, according to an Emerson College/RealClear Pennsylvania (RCPA) poll released Thursday.
As a result of the poll, Mr. Trump lead In the Keystone State, Harris has an approval rating of 51% to 49% among voters, including undecided voters. playing cards got it It has gained two points since September, with both he and Harris receiving 49 percent, and Lean, who is undecided, was also included in the sample.
Mr. Trump still held an advantage over Ms. Harris until voters who were still undecided from the previous poll were forced to choose a candidate. Among respondents, 49% said they supported Harris, 48% said they supported her, and 3% were undecided.
An Emerson College/RCPA poll in September showed the candidates tied for 48% of the vote, excluding Learner. 20% were undecided.
Spencer Kimball, director of Emerson College's polling office, pointed out that there are large differences in support rates by age group.
“There is a huge age gap among voters. Voters under 50 support Harris 57% to 39%, while voters over 50 support Trump 57% to 41%,” he said. I support it.”
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The poll also took the temperature of Pennsylvania's hotly contested Senate race between Sen. Bob Casey (D-Pa.) and Republican businessman Dave McCormick.
Among respondents, 47% support Mr. Casey, and with 12 days until the election, 46% support Mr. McCormick. Another 2% said they would support someone else, and a significant 6% said they were undecided. McCormick is up one point from the September Emerson College poll, but Casey's support remains unchanged.
The investigation comes as Mr. Casey is scrambling to flee from Mr. Harris and Democrats in an attempt to pander to former President Donald Trump during closing arguments. This is in stark contrast to the strategy of Ms. Harris, who addressed reporters outside the vice president's official residence in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday and compared Mr. Trump to Adolf Hitler.
Mr. Casey is seeking to align himself with Mr. Trump, but this comes after he twice voted to convict the former president on impeachment charges.
Emerson College/RCPA sampled 860 likely voters between October 21 and 22, with a confidence interval of plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.



