United States elections 2024

‘The Five’: Biden’s campaign rolls out ‘Operation Old Man’​


 

Path To Peace with Robert F Kennedy Jr - Episode One​


 

Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a Pro-Crypto Presidential Candidiate, to Appear at Consensus 2024​


 

How Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Can WIN The 2024 Election​


 

1-on-1 with Robert F. Kennedy, Jr.​


 

Is Biden the Real Spoiler? | Biden vs. RFK Jr.​


 

Trump SCARED SH*TLESS as Polls NOSEDIVE​


 

Trump Humiliates VP Hopefuls | The Strange Lies In Kristi Noem’s Book | This Network Is For Sale​


 

Donald Trump Trails in Battleground State Poll for First Time in Six Months​

Published May 08, 2024 at 11:35 AM EDTUpdated May 08, 2024 at 1:03 PM EDT


00:47
Donald Trump Loses Battleground State Poll for First Time in Six Months
By Kate Plummer
FOLLOW
4

Former President Donald Trump is polling behind President Joe Biden in Arizona for the first time in six months.
According to a poll by Data Orbital released on Tuesday, Biden would garner 38.8 percent of the vote share, while Trump would get 38.1 percent if an election were held at the time of sampling. While this lead is incredibly small, and within the poll's margin error, it represents the first time Biden has taken the lead in an Arizona state poll since November, according to analysis by polling aggregator FiveThirtyEight.

For instance, an April Echelon Insights survey of 2,401 registered voters, conducted for the conservative think tank The Heritage Foundation, showed that Trump was ahead of Biden in Arizona by 51 percent to 45 percent.
In March, the former president and the incumbent won enough primary races to secure, respectively, the Republican and Democratic nominations in the 2024 presidential election. Polls have so far shown that the 2020 rematch will be tight as the pair are statistically tied in most surveys or holding only marginal leads.

ADVERTISING

Donald Trump

Donald Trump at Manhattan Criminal Court on May 7, 2024, in New York City. A poll shows that Joe Biden is narrowly leading Trump in Arizona, ahead of the election. PHOTO BY WIN MCNAMEE/GETTY IMAGES
Arizona has historically leaned towards Republicans in presidential election, backing the GOP candidate in six of the last eight trips to the ballot box, but it backed Biden in 2020 and the Democratic party in several statewide races in 2022. It's expected to be a close race in November.

Sign up for Newsletter
NEWSLETTER
The Bulletin
Your Morning Starts Here
Begin your day with a curated outlook of top news around the world and why it matters.
I want to receive special offers and promotions from Newsweek
By clicking on SIGN ME UP, you agree to Newsweek's Terms of Use & Privacy Policy.You may unsubscribe at any time.
Battleground states like Arizona will play a key role in determining the result of the election, so surveys from those states could be more telling than those of national polls.
However, many experts and academics have cautioned against relying on polls to try to predict the outcome of the election rematch. Thomas Gift, who heads the Centre on U.S. Politics at University College London, previously told Newsweek that reading too much into polls was "a fool's errand."

voices_promo_link.svg
Exclusively Available to SubscribersTry it now for $1
"Polls are so variable at this point that the only consistent insight we can glean from them is that Biden and Trump are neck and neck—not only nationally but in key swing states," he said.
READ MORE Donald Trump
Newsweek contacted representatives for Trump and Biden by email to comment on this story.

In response, Steven Cheung, Trump's campaign spokesperson, sent Newsweek links to a series of Arizona polls from February to April in which Trump led Biden in the state.
Data Orbital's poll was conducted from April 27-29. The sample size was 550 people, and the survey had a margin of error of plus or minus 4.26 percentage points.
The presidential election will take place on November 5.
 

Primary Election results: Indiana governor, U.S. Senate​


 

Trump suffers SURPRISE blow in election​


 

AI sharpens political targeting in US presidential race​


 

Are America’s university campus protests threatening Democrats’ re-election chances like in 1968?​


 

Trump will lose election by at least ten million votes | David Cay Johnston​


 

Users who are viewing this thread

Back
Top