In elections in which third-party candidates participate, Wick's vote The Pennsylvania poll shows former President Donald Trump leading incumbent Vice President Kamala Harris by one point, 48 percent to 47 percent.
If there are only two major candidates, the votes will be tied at 49 percent.
Additionally, the poll, conducted among 1,607 voters from August 27-29, found the U.S. Senate race to be a near tie for incumbent Democrat Bob Casey with 48 percent of the vote and Republican challenger David McCormick with 46 percent.
One interesting thing about this poll is that it used different questions to investigate: For example, when only Trump and Harris were on the ballot, the race was tied at 49%. But when the vice presidential candidates were added, Harris and Waltz beat Trump and Vance by one point, 49% to 48%.
What I found is this Of particular interest…If Harris had overcome the virulent anti-Semitism within herself and her party and chosen Democratic Pennsylvania Governor Josh Shapiro as her running mate, she would have beaten Trump by six points, 51 to 45 percent. But because Shapiro is Jewish and Harris is a bigot, she stuck with “Stolen Valor.”
CNN's Cornish: Shapiro may have angered left-wing activists by denouncing anti-Semitism at campus protests
Just as Hillary Clinton regrets not visiting Wisconsin, Harris may end up regretting her choice as her running mate.
Pennsylvania is a state that will likely decide the 2024 presidential election, and Harris currently leads by less than one point, according to the RealClearPolitics average of Pennsylvania polls. 0.8 points To be precise.
Unfortunately, we don’t have the old Wick poll to compare on an apples-to-apples basis, but we do know that this poll was conducted the week after CacklyMcNeverBorderCzar’s policy- and substance-free convention, and before his disastrous Thursday night interview with the far-left CNN.
So what do we get out of that…?
First, Harris isn't making any big leaps from the hollow convention, despite the billions of dollars of corporate media advertising boosting her. Second, she's probably just peaking. Sure, any number of unexpected events could work in her favor, and they're not uncommon in the final weeks of a hotly contested presidential election, but given what we know, I'd rather have Trump than Harris.
First, we must remember that Harris has already peaked and that even if she were to tie at best, pollsters significantly underestimated Trump's approval rating in the last two presidential elections.
Then there's the simple reality of post-Labor Day busyness. We all saw what happened when Harris emerged from behind the teleprompter and sat down in front of the media. Despite CNN's chief Kamala cheerleader Dana Bash gently tossing a softball, Kamala looked weak and underpowered, especially with Stolen Valor advocate Liar Waltz towering over her like a father accompanying his learning-disabled daughter to a job interview.
Also, as I said yesterday, even before the Trump campaign took off This advertisement, Kamala insisted her values haven't changed in three interviews with CNN without clarifying her extreme stance — she just handed Trump the dream quotes he slammed upon her in ad after ad.
Again, this is not a prediction. Anything can happen, especially in an election, and has already happened. But it's not going to get better for Kamala. She's in a desperate situation where she can't give media interviews. Either she takes a hit for hiding from the media, or she runs the risk of making another CNNLOL-like fiasco. Either way, it's not a good situation.
Then there's the upcoming debate that she's been desperately trying to escape.
Kamala isn't stupid, her problem is that she doesn't think through what she believes, so she can't explain it and ends up crumbling under pressure.
Flashback — Words to the wise: Kamala Harris struggles to define “culture” for 45 seconds
The White House
John Nolte's first and last novel Borrowed time, Winning 5-Star Rave Reviews Submissions from our everyday readers. You can read excerpts here here And a detailed review here. Also available in Hardcover and Kindle and Audiobooks.


