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Donald Trump Leads Kamala Harris in Swing State of Pennsylvania

Former President Donald Trump is leading Vice President Kamala Harris in the battleground state of Pennsylvania, according to a recent poll from American Greatness.

of investigation The candidacy would have begun the day before President Joe Biden formally dropped out of the race and nominated Harris to succeed him in the July 20-23 2024 election.

In any case, a survey of 600 Pennsylvania voters shows Trump leading Harris with 47% support, with 45% backing her. The remaining 9% remain undecided. This is consistent with a poll showing that 68% believe Biden is “mentally and physically not capable of carrying out the duties of the presidency for the next four years.”

The survey also found that a majority of Pennsylvania respondents, 38%, believe Biden economics have not helped most middle-class families in the state “at all,” compared with 15% who believe it has helped “very much.” The survey also found that a majority of respondents, 51%, said they were better off economically under the Trump administration.

The survey also found that one in five (21%) said the July 13 assassination attempt on President Trump in Butler, Pennsylvania “made them more likely” to support Trump, while 68% said it had no real impact on their voting intentions. Moreover, more than a quarter (28%) said the assassination attempt had made them more approving of President Trump’s leadership, while a majority (55%) said their approval remained unchanged.

Related — Defiant: Bloodied Trump pumps fist at crowd after assassination attempt
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The poll comes as Democratic leaders have effectively designated Harris the nominee to replace Biden, without voters themselves having a say in the matter. But that fact hasn’t deterred people like Sen. Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.), who gave a strong endorsement for Harris this week despite a clear lack of enthusiasm from his audience.

“Vice President Harris has done an absolutely amazing job quickly of securing the majority of delegates needed to win the Democratic nomination as the next president of the United States, and the vast majority of my senators quickly and enthusiastically endorsed her,” he said, again ignoring the fact that actual Democratic voters did not make this decision. Despite this surprising fact, Schumer maintained that the process “unfolded from the grassroots, from the bottom up.”

“…We are here today to support Vice President Kamala Harris,” Schumer declared enthusiastically, clapping his hands. When no one clapped, Schumer said, “I’ll clap. You don’t have to.”

“Vice President Harris has secured a majority of the delegates. Today, in Wisconsin and across America, we begin a new chapter, and it will be the greatest chapter yet. Vice President Harris will defeat Donald Trump and become the next president of the United States of America,” Schumer said at a press conference, before pointing at the audience, shaking his finger and asking, “Any applause?” But no one clapped.

One thing conservatives expect will be a blow to Harris, especially in Pennsylvania, is her opposition to fracking, as she stated in a 2020 CNN town hall: “There’s no question that I’m in favor of banning fracking.”

“We have to start with what we can do on day one around our public lands and then we have to write the legislation, but yes, this is something I’ve taken on in California,” she said. “I have a history of working on this issue.”

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