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Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden continues to lead incumbent President Donald Trump in one of Sunday’s opinion polls. But his lead has shrunk by two percentage points, according to the Washington Post and the latest ABC News poll, in which Biden gets 54 percent to Trump’s 44.
In the case of men and women, the differences become clear. In the Washington Post poll, Donald Trump attracts men while Joe Biden attracts women. 55 percent of the men polled would vote for Trump against 42 for Biden. But when it comes to women, the difference is greater. There, 65 percent of women would vote for Biden and only 34 for Trump.
The sample is small, 889 registered voters, and the poll was conducted between September 21 and 24. The margin of error is 3.5 percentage points.
The Real Clear Politics site, which compares and combines a number of different opinion polls, has shown a stable lead for Joe Biden throughout the year with the largest gap in Biden’s lead at just over 10 percentage points at the end of June. . On Sunday, the site showed Biden leading with 49.8 percent against Trump’s 42.8 percent for Trump.
But the spread is cool between different opinion polls where one shows an advantage of 1 percentage point for Biden and another 10 percentage points in the weighted polls; the latest from the Washington Post and ABC News.
The New York Times publishes its own poll, based on 950 people, on Sunday and shows Biden’s lead of 49 percent to 41 percent. That poll also has a margin of error of 3.5 percentage points.
CBS News, which also publishes a poll on Sunday, notes that voters in two of the states that can decide the Nov. 3 presidential election, Georgia and North Carolina, believe the presidential election will be even more important since the president Trump nominated conservative Judge Amy Coney Barrett. to replace the recently deceased Ruth Bader Ginsburg on the Supreme Court.
When asked whether the appointment makes the election more or less important, 53 percent in Georgia and 56 percent in North Carolina answer “more important” and only a small percentage in the two states “less important.” . In both states, there were more Democrats than Republicans who felt that HD’s appointment made the vote more important.