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Statewide surveys of Michigan, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania all demonstrate the presidential candidates are polling within the margin of error.
A new national poll and a slew of battleground state surveys continue to show an exceptionally tight race for the White House.
Polls published on Oct. 31 covering the entire United States and three of the critical battleground states—Michigan, North Carolina, and Pennsylvania—all showed that the race between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump is within each poll’s margin of error.
The same survey found 46 percent would vote for Trump.
According to its methodology, YouGov surveyed about 1,600 adult U.S. citizens in an online panel poll conducted between Oct. 26 and Oct. 29. It has a margin of error of 3.5 percent.
The YouGov poll is consistent with the results of other recently published national surveys.
A poll conducted and published by The Washington Post on Oct. 31 that was focused on Michigan found Trump is leading with 47 percent of support among registered voters to Harris’s 45 percent.
Another Michigan poll published on Oct. 31, conducted by the University of Massachusetts Lowell and YouGov and published by UMass Lowell’s Center for Public Opinion, said Harris leads Trump by a 4-point spread.
The Real Clear Politics average of polls in the Wolverine State, as of Oct. 31, shows Harris has a slight 0.4 percent lead in the presidential contest.
UMass Lowell published a pair of additional polls on Oct. 31 covering Pennsylvania and North Carolina.
In the Keystone State, UMass Lowell’s concluded that the race is essentially neck-and-neck.
The results of the UMass Lowell poll for Pennsylvania are consistent with the national polling average published by Real Clear Politics. As of Oct. 31, Trump holds an average 0.7 percent advantage over Harris.
The same two organizations found that Trump is leading Harris by a two-percent margin in North Carolina.
According to the poll’s methodology, the margin of error is 4.2 percent. About 730 North Carolinians were interviewed between Oct. 16 and 24 for the poll.