According to new CNN polls conducted by SSRS, neither Vice President Kamala Harris nor former President Donald Trump has established a clear advantage in the race for the White House in two key Southern battleground states
According to the poll results, it was likely that the voters in Georgia would divide their votes, with Trump standing to get 48% of the votes while Harris has been projected to go home with 47% of the votes. Harris stands at 48%, and Trump’s is 47%. Results are within the margin of error in both states, meaning no clear leader in either contest.
It has been perceived that the two states have been in the key contest by the two candidates in this year’s presidential tail elections. In 2008, during the election of Obama, the voters in North Carolina narrowly supported the former president, but in the past years, the voters in the state have been the supporters of Republican candidates; in the 2020 elections, Donald Trump earned a victory against Joe Biden with a little margin. In Georgia victory was recorded by Joe Biden, with just one per cent of the victor giving him victory in the state; the victory made him the first Democrat to win an election in the state since Bill Clinton in 1992.
The current has indicated that there has been a slim movement since the last poll that was inducted by CNN in late August in Georgia, while a late poll was conducted in North Carolina in Late September. Both states have presented that the voters have not found who will be the clear leader in the states, with both contestants in a tight race. An overwhelming 95% of likely voters in each state now say they’ve made up their minds about their vote, leaving a dwindling pool of potentially movable voters, although one that’s still large enough to swing the race either way.
More than half of the voters have disclosed that they have already cast their ballots. In Georgia (59%) and North Carolina (52%), the individuals who indicated that they had cast their votes noted that they had split their votes between Harris by a 7-point margin in Georgia and by 6 points in North Carolina.
In the two states, the polls have indicated that Harris has 69% of voters who are backing her to win the election. In North Carolina, the vice president has 67% of electorates who are backing her to win the election. The voters have noted that they mostly voted to support her rather than to oppose Trump. That’s a higher share than in CNN’s latest polling in the other five battleground states – Arizona, Michigan, Nevada, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin – where the average share hovers closer to 60%.
Considerably the difference is due to Harris’ Black backers in Georgia and North Carolina, about 8 in 10 of whom say their vote is primarily an endorsement of the vice president. That’s the case even as Black documented voters are less likely than White documented voters in both states to describe themselves as extremely motivated to vote.
The polls also showed that the largest Trump supporters in the states, 81% in Georgia and 75% in North Carolina, indicated that their vote was primarily about support for the former president rather than opposition to Harris. The comments have been indicated to be similar to those of Trump backers saying the same in other battleground states.
With the race for the candidate who will lead from the White House currently very thin, the figures obtained from the polls show that Democrat Josh Stein holds a clear advantage in the race for North Carolina governor, leading Republican Mark Robinson 53% to 37%. Robinson has been involved in many scandals in the past. The study shows that 77% of Trump voters in the state say they’re backing Robinson in the gubernatorial race, with 10% backing Stein and another 12% saying they wouldn’t vote for either of the major candidates 96% of Harris’ supporters in the state, have indicated that they will be supporting Stein for the elections.