Polls show Kamala Harris boost jumpoff in US presidential elections

Kamala Harris continues to gain strength in the US presidential elections, as national polls show she leads the race with Donald Trump. Recently, FiveThirtyEight, the main site of polling analyses, places the Democrat candidate with 2.1 points above its Republican rival. It becomes known that Harris leads in Michigan. [...]
Kamala Harris continues to gain strength in the US presidential elections, as national polls show she leads the race with Donald Trump.
Recently, FiveThirtyEight, the main site of polling analyses, places the Democrat candidate with 2.1 points above its Republican rival.
It becomes known that Harris leads in Michigan with 2 points, Pennsylvania with 1.1 points and Wisconsin with 1.8 points.
While Trump leads in Arizona with less than half a point and in Georgia half a point.
The American vice president, 59, has changed the election race since mid-July, when Joe Biden, 81, finally heeded calls from his party to resign from candidacy for another term.
He supported Harris take over the leadership of the Democratic Party for this November, while he carried out his mandate, writes the GuardianHe's following in on Telegrafie.
Amy Walter, from the Cook Political Report, said that before Harris entered the race, Biden “was behind with a considerable number of votes”.
“Now, just in the time Harris is in the race, you've seen that those figures move significantly towards her”, Walter said.
As reported, Harris' choice of vice president is Tim Walz, governor of Minnesota.
Among the widely recognised individual surveys, Harris headed for a second week in the Economist/ YouGov, maintaining a two-point advantage.
Reuters/ Ipsos found Harris with five points, 42%-37%, twice as many in the latest poll, made immediately after Biden withdrew.
Ipsos also said that in a separate survey, he found that Harris heads Trump 422%-40% in seven states.
A national poll by the Marquette University in Wisconsin showed that Harris rose for six points, with 53% support among eligible voters at 47% for Trump.
The Marquette survey contained other news reports about Harris, noting its energetic effect as the campaign moves towards the country's expansion: an 11-point increase in respondents who said they were too enthusiastic to vote in November.
“Enthusiasm has risen significantly among the Democrats, with a slight increase in Republicans”, wrote Marquette pollster Charles Franklin.












