Donald Trump, United States | Here, Trump has overwhelming leadership



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Recent polls suggest Joe Biden doesn’t stand a chance in this district.

NEW YORK (Nettavisen): On Wednesday, President Donald Trump will hold an electoral rally in Gastonia, in the state of North Carolina.

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Rocker states are crucial

The swing states of Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Florida and Arizona are likely to be decisive for the results of this year’s election.

Recent polls give challenger Joe Biden an advantage in all six of these states, with the exception of North Carolina. An average of polls across the six states gives Biden 49.1 percent, compared with 45 percent for Trump.

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A recent ABC News / Washington Post poll published Tuesday shows the position is almost exactly the same between Biden and Trump in North Carolina a few weeks before the election.

While Biden receives 49 percent of the support, Trump receives the support of 48 percent of voters in North Carolina.

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But when it comes to a group of voters in the particular state, Biden has no chance against Trump.

The ABC News / Washington Post poll shows that up to 82 percent of white evangelical Protestants will vote for Trump, while 17 percent say they will vote for Biden.

Won 50 vs. 46 percent in 2016

North Carolina’s electorate also stands out from the rest of the country. In the state, white Protestants make up 31 percent of the electorate, while the national figure is 15 percent.

North Carolina has long been considered a Republican state, and Trump also won the state with 50 percent of the vote to Hillary Clinton’s 46 percent four years ago.

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According to ABC News, the state has been Republican in every presidential election since 1968, except in two cases:

Barack Obama won here in 2008 with around 14,000 votes out of 4.3 million cast, while Jimmy Carter won the state even more comfortably in 1976.

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Biden leads with 51.3%, against 42.4

Though he’s even in North Carolina, an average from the latest national polls shows Biden garnering 51.3 percent support, versus Trump’s 42.4 percent, NTB writes.

The case continues below:

54.1 percent now believe that Trump does a poor job as president, while 42.7 percent believe he does it well, shows a weighted average from the latest opinion polls.

56% of Christian Protestants voted for Trump

Religion is a clear marker for which party Americans vote for. Almost half of the voters are Protestant Christians, and of these, 56 percent cast their vote for Trump in 2016.

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Twenty percent of Protestants describe themselves as evangelical Christians and among them received almost nine out of ten votes, 88 percent.

However, among black Protestants, who represent about 7 percent of the electorate, up to 96 percent voted for Hillary Clinton in the last election.

Also among American Catholics, who make up about 20 percent of voters, a majority (52 percent) voted for Trump in the last election.

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The exception was among Catholics of Latin American descent, with nearly eight in ten voting for Clinton. However, that group represents only 5 percent of the electorate.

Trump: – I am “the chosen one”

Joe Biden, unlike Clinton, comes from a Catholic family, which can affect this group of voters. If he won the election, it would almost become historic. The United States has previously had only one Catholic president, and that was John F. Kennedy.

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Trump often talks about God, surrounds himself with religious leaders, and poses with the Bible. He once referred to himself as “the chosen one,” but most Americans have doubts about how religious he really is.

Half of those surveyed in a March poll weren’t even sure if they were Protestant, Catholic or religious.

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Liberty University Falwell FILE - In this Wednesday, Nov. 28, 2018 file photo, Jerry Falwell Jr., right, answers a student's question, accompanied by his wife, Becki, during a town hall meeting on the crisis. of opioids in a convocation at Liberty.  University in Lynchburg, Virginia.  On August 7, 2020, Falwell resigned, at least temporarily, as president of the school.

2 out of 3 Muslims will vote for Biden

One in four American voters does not identify with any religion, and among them, 65 percent voted for Clinton in 2016. He also received three out of four votes from the American Jewish minority and clearly won among American Muslims.

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Muslims make up about 1 percent of voters in the United States, and two out of three say in opinion polls that they will vote for Biden.

Although relatively small, many of them live in major states like Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Ohio, and Texas, so Muslim voices can be important. The same is true of Jewish voices, mainly in Florida.

54 percent of whites voted for Trump

Seventy-four percent of those who last voted in the presidential election were white, and 54 percent of them voted for Trump.

10 percent of the voters were black, and more than nine out of ten voted for Clinton. Virtually all black women voted for her.

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Among Latin American voters, who also accounted for about 10 percent, nearly seven out of 10 voted for Clinton, who also got eight out of 10 votes among Asian voters.

American Voter Background: This is How Voters in the United States Vote



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