Trump Shows Signs of Strength in Sun Belt Battlegrounds, Polls Find

By The New York Times (U.S.) | Created at 2024-09-23 09:13:11 | Updated at 2024-09-30 07:25:17 6 days ago
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New polls from The New York Times and Siena College showed Donald J. Trump ahead in Arizona and leading in tight races in Georgia and North Carolina.

The New York Times/Siena College Poll

Sept. 17 to 21

official headshots of Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, smiling, positioned next to each other with a blue line under Harris and a red line under Trump

If the 2024 presidential election were held today, who would you vote for if the candidates were Kamala Harris and Donald Trump?

Among likely voters. Shaded areas represent margins of error.

Sept. 23, 2024, 5:03 a.m. ET

Voters across the Sun Belt say that Donald J. Trump improved their lives when he was president — and worry that a Kamala Harris White House would not — setting the stage for an extraordinarily competitive contest in three key states, according to the latest polls from The New York Times and Siena College.

The polls found that Mr. Trump has gained a lead in Arizona and remains ahead in Georgia, two states that he lost to President Biden in 2020. But in North Carolina, which has not voted for a Democrat since 2008, Ms. Harris trails Mr. Trump by just a narrow margin.

The polls of these three states, taken from Sept. 17 to 21, presented further evidence that in a sharply divided nation, the presidential contest is shaping up to be one of the tightest in history.

[These latest Times/Siena results are some of the best results for Donald Trump in these states for weeks, Nate Cohn writes.]

Arizona, Georgia and North Carolina are on the roster of seven battleground states where the focus of both the Trump and Harris campaigns has been since Labor Day. Ms. Harris has shown relative strength in several key states across the Midwest, including, most critically to her hopes of becoming president, Pennsylvania.

But Arizona, which Mr. Biden won by just over 10,400 votes in 2020, now presents a challenge for the Harris campaign. Mr. Trump is ahead, 50 percent to 45 percent, the poll found. A Times/Siena poll there in August found Ms. Harris leading by five percentage points. Latino voters, in particular, appear to have moved away from Ms. Harris, though a significant number — 10 percent — said they were now undecided. And Mr. Trump is benefiting from ticket splitting there: While Ms. Harris is trailing, the poll shows that the Democratic candidate for Senate is ahead.

Ariz. Ga. N.C.Times/Siena

Likely voters, Sept. 17 to 21

Polling average

voters, As of 5 a.m. Sept. 23

Emerson College/The Hill

Likely voters, Sept. 15–18

Cygnal Political/Carolina Journal

Likely voters, Sept. 15–16

Quinnipiac University

Likely voters, Sept. 4–8

Data Orbital/AZ Free News

Likely voters, Sept. 7–9

CNN/SSRS

Likely voters, Aug. 23–29

Trump +5 Trump +4 Trump +3
Trump +2 Trump +2 Even
Trump +1 Trump +2 Even
No poll No poll Even
No poll Trump +3 Harris +3
Even No poll No poll
Trump +5 Harris +1 No poll
Arizona Margin
Pre-Debate Margin
Post-DebateTimes/Siena
Among likely voters in ArizonaPolling average
Among all recent Arizona polls
Harris +5 Trump +5
Trump <1 Trump +2
Georgia Times/Siena
Among likely voters in GeorgiaPolling average
Among all recent Georgia polls
Trump +4 Trump +4
Trump <1 Trump +2
North Carolina Times/Siena
Among likely voters in North CarolinaPolling average
Among all recent North Carolina polls
Harris +2 Trump +3
Harris +1 Even

The New York Times/Siena College Poll
ARIZ., GA., N.C.

Do you think Donald Trump’s policies have helped people like you, hurt people like you, or haven’t made much of a difference either way?

Do you think Kamala Harris’s policies would help people like you, hurt people like you, or wouldn’t make much of a difference either way?


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