Vice President Harris and former President Trump were evenly matched during Wednesday's meeting. Quinnipiac University Poll Number of voters in Wisconsin.
Both candidates received the support of 48 percent of the state's residents, but the results varied widely when measuring key election issues, personality traits, and gender.
When participants were asked who would handle the economy better, Trump consistently beat Harris, 52% to 47%. immigrants, 53 percent versus 44 percent; and Middle East conflict, 52 percent to 44 percent.
Democratic candidates dominated voters' support on the issue of abortion, with 54% supporting Harris and 40% for Trump, and 50% supporting democracy compared to 47% for Trump.
“Mr. Trump has an advantage on some important issues, and Ms. Harris has an advantage on several important characteristics. In a race this close, the question is who will win or lose? “That's it,” asked Tim Malloy, a Quinnipiac University polling analyst.
In Wisconsin, 57% of women and 39% of men support Ms. Harris, while 59% of men support Mr. Trump, compared to 38% of women.
Forty-eight percent of likely voters said they thought Harris was honest, and 40% said the same about the Republican candidate.
“This is a battle of the sexes, not a contest. In Michigan and Wisconsin, there is a clear difference between the number of women who support Ms. Harris and the number of men who support Mr. Trump.” November 5 “Everything will depend on who shows up,” Malloy explained.
Quinnipiac also assessed the extremely close Wisconsin Senate race that will determine which party regains the majority in the upper chamber.
Incumbent Democratic Sen. Tammy Baldwin received 49% support among likely voters, while Republican challenger Eric Hovde received 48% support, according to poll results.
The survey was conducted from Oct. 17 to Oct. 21 among 1,108 likely Wisconsin voters, with a margin of error of plus or minus 2.9 percentage points.





