USA Today, Dec 9, 2023. Donald Trump’s support now tops 50% in Iowa, where the former president has strengthened his already overwhelming lead over Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis − neither of whom has fully broken away as the clear second choice.
A new Des Moines Register/NBC News/Mediacom Iowa Poll shows 51% of likely Republican caucusgoers pick Trump as their first choice for president, up from 43% in an October Iowa Poll.
DeSantis, who was tied with Haley at 16% in October, has opened up a little day light with Haley by gaining 3 percentage points to pull away from her in second place with 19%.
Breitbart, Dec 11, 2023. President Donald Trump leads Joe Biden among independents, a recent survey from The Economist/YouGov found.
The survey asked respondents who they would support in the 2024 presidential election, and overall, it showed Biden with a one-point edge over Trump — 42 percent to the former president’s 41 percent support. In last week’s Economist/YouGov poll Biden led Trump by two points.
The survey provided a demographic breakdown, which showed Trump boasting an advantage among independent voters. He leads Biden by nine points there — 37 percent to 28 percent. That marks a significant jump for Trump, as he led independents by just two points the week prior.
Fourteen percent of independents said other, twelve percent said they would not vote, and nine percent said they are unsure.
When asked who they believe will be the winner of a presidential election between Biden and Trump, regardless of their personal preference, 44 percent, overall, said Trump, compared to 35 percent who said Biden. Independents are also more confident that Trump would win, 44 percent to Biden’s 25 percent.
State of the Union, Dec 11, 2023 President Donald Trump is leading in six states according to a recent poll, with a third-party candidate named Robert F. Kennedy Jr. potentially drawing significant support from Biden voters.
The poll suggests that with Kennedy in the mix, Biden’s lead in several states turns into a significant deficit.
While the GOP nomination race is ongoing, the potential impact of third-party candidates on the 2024 election is becoming a cause for concern for the Democratic Party.
“More Biden 2020 than Trump 2020 voters say they would vote for Robert F. Kennedy Jr. if he was a candidate in all six states polled,” Redfield and Wilton reported.
“In fact, more than twice as many Biden 2020 as Trump 2020 voters would vote for RFK Jr. in North Carolina (11 percent vs 5 percent) and Michigan (11 percent vs 4 percent).”
Bình luận