Harris-Trump, some interesting poll results published on the eve of presidential television debate

The US presidential race remains very strong, according to polls published on Sunday, two days before Kamala Harris and Donald Trump hold their first and potentially only television debate. According to foreign media, the latest survey confirms Trump retains support from about half of [...]
The US presidential race remains very strong, according to polls published on Sunday, two days before Kamala Harris and Donald Trump hold their first and potentially only television debate.
According to foreign media, the latest survey confirms that Trump maintains support from about half of voters, despite the republican's historic status as a convict and its role in promoting the unprecedented effort to overturn his loss in 2020 to Joe Biden.
Harris, who entered the race only after President Joe Biden resigned unexpectedly in July, has quickly transformed himself from a vice president to a serious contender.
However, polls show it has not made great progress.
A New York Times/Sienna poll found that 78-year-old Trump is leading Harris on a national scale by 48 to 47 percent.
The US presidential elections are decided by counting the results of post-state race after state, instead of a general national vote, which means a small part of the displaced “states usually set balance.
The survey found that Harris, 59, was just ahead in Wisconsin, Michigan and Pennsylvania, and equal in four other states “wavering” Navada, Georgia, North Carolina and Arizona.
A CBS survey News/YouGov put Harris forward at a percentage point in Michigan and Wisconsin and equal in Pennsylvania.
The elections have already been introduced to <x0fasis fire”, with 81-year-old Biden fleeing amid concerns about his age, a Trump that survived the bullet of a killer at a rally and fears that Trump will again refuse to admit if he loses in November.
However, recent numbers confirm that each candidate maintains an extremely stable base of loyalty, “sharing the country almost equally”.
But a change in the game could be Tuesday's ABC News debate, the only planned one between the two.
Trump will be under pressure to curb his characteristic use of insults and intimidation, while he stands next to a running candidate to become the first female president in US history.
On the other hand, Harris would have to use the great vision “to connect to” with Americans in a way that she was unable to make as vice president and has had little time to reach her super-pressed campaign.
With Trump now the oldest presidential candidate in US history, it is providing an optimistic and far-reaching message, in contrast with Trump's apocalypse claims that the country faces the final “” without it at the White House.
At the same time, Harris will have to solve the puzzle about how to debate against Trump, in relation to his “Data <x01> respectively.
Beden, in his single debate against Trump before giving up his candidacy, found himself completely incapable of getting out.












