Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are polling neck and neck in an NBC News poll as Election Day draws near.
A survey of early voters found Americans are more eager to vote before Election Day than four years ago but the partisan divide remains as deep, NBC News reported in a new poll. With just weeks
A recent poll found that 46 percent of Democrats planned on voting early, compared to 31 percent of Republicans.
The Republican National Committee announced in April it plans to enlist more than 100,000 volunteers and attorneys in battleground states for the election, county officials in Iowa say they're getting more volunteers.
David Byler, chief of research at Noble Predictive Insights, told The Center Square that neither Republicans nor Democrats have a clear lead on the issue.
Major election polls got it wrong in 2016 and again in 2020. The fault lies with the complexity of the American system and also with certain shortcomings of the polling institutes themselves.
Republicans are seeing inaccurate election coverage and are struggling to determine what is true in the lead-up to the 2024 vote.
A big Trump lead in the state paradoxically adds to evidence of a smaller Electoral College edge for him. And a choice by pollsters may be causing them to miss state shifts.
With three weeks to go until Election Day Nov. 5, Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump remain in a heated – and much too close to predict – race, according to the latest polls.
Vice President Harris is leading former President Trump by 5 points nationally among likely voters, according to a Marist Poll survey released Wednesday. Harris and her running mate, Minnesota