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Harris, Trump deadlocked in Pennsylvania: Poll

Vice President Harris leads former President Trump by 2 points as he races for narrow victory in Pennsylvania, Fox News Friday public opinion poll indicates.

Although Harris has an approval rating among registered voters of 48% compared to 50% of Trump, the race is evenly contested among likely voters.

Polls show that Republican candidates resonate with voters in the Keystone State on issues such as immigration and the economy, with more than half of voters saying they will do a better job than Harris on those issues.

Eighty-six percent of Trump supporters were confident of their vote, compared to 92% of Harris supporters. Over the past two months, Ms. Harris has increased her favorability rating with female voters by 9 points and has proven to resonate with college students and recent graduates.

According to a Fox News poll, support for Harris among voters under 30 has increased by 17 points since July.

The groups most enthusiastic about President Trump are men, whites without college degrees, and rural voters. Trump has nearly doubled his lead among men and independents since July, according to a Fox News poll Friday.

“Pennsylvania hasn't shown any breakthroughs, and we shouldn't expect them to,” Democratic Fox host Chris Anderson said. “Whether they do a good job could decide who wins the state.” News investigation with Republican Daron Shaw.

A Morning Consult/Bloomberg poll from The Hill and Decision Desk Headquarters shows Harris leading by 1.3 percentage points in the Keystone State, a 3-point increase among voters in the past week. It is said that

The Fox News poll was co-led by Beacon Research (Democrats) and Shaw & Company Research (Republicans) and surveyed 1,021 randomly selected registered voters in Pennsylvania. It was held from the 20th to the 24th of May.

Respondents completed an online survey after speaking with an interviewer over the phone or receiving a text message. The results were within a sampling error of plus or minus 3 percentage points, with a margin of error of plus or minus 3.5 percentage points for a subsample of 775 likely voters.

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