US Presidential Election Poll: Donald Trump Returns To Joe Biden
JAKARTA - A poll ahead of the 2024 US Presidential Election shows that former President Donald Trump outperforms Joe Biden in key states that are likely to determine next year's election.
This shows that Donald Trump is not only a favorite to get a Republican nomination, but also has a strong position to reclaim the White House.
Donald Trump is ahead of Joe Biden in a poll without any choice of third candidates in states including Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, Arizona, Wisconsin, and Pennsylvania. Whereas in the 2020 presidential election, these states were won by Joe Biden.
Now Donald Trump needs to make sure his backing voice doesn't change in some of these states if he wants to win in the 2024 presidential election.
These figures underscore that Joe Biden still has work to do, although experts agree that many things can change in about 10 months to the election.
"I think this illustrates our position both during the leadership of the current former president and president towards November 2024," said Nick Trainer, former campaign official Donald Trump, on the Yes Labels podcast.
CNN polls released this week show Donald Trump is ahead of Joe Biden with a 5-point gap in Georgia, the state Biden won in 2020 with around 12,000 votes.
The poll also shows that Trump is 10 points ahead of Biden in Michigan, where the US President won by a margin of around 155,000 votes in 2020.
The poll also found that the majority in these two states, 54 percent in Georgia and 56 percent in Michigan, thought Biden's policy had exacerbated economic conditions in the US.
The Bloomberg News/Morning Consult poll released this week also provides equally poor results for Biden.
The survey shows that Biden lags behind Trump in key states, with 11 points in North Carolina, 7 points in Georgia, 6 points in Wisconsin, 5 points in Nevada, 4 points in Michigan, and 3 points in Arizona.
Trump has now confirmed his status as the leading candidate in the Republican presidential candidate nomination, by exceeding the 50 percent threshold in Iowa's recent survey conducted by poll agency J Ann Selzer.
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Trump has not seen any decline in support even as he testified at a fraud trial in New York City.
"This shows that the voters who are open to choosing Trump do not view the indictment as something other than political retaliation," said Nick Trainer.