According to the latest AJC poll, President Donald Trump is currently leading former Vice President Joe Biden in Georgia. This poll has sparked significant interest and discussion among political analysts and voters alike. The results of this poll are crucial as Georgia is considered a battleground state in the upcoming presidential election.
Trump's lead in Georgia can be attributed to several factors, such as his strong base of support in rural areas and among conservative voters. Additionally, Trump's messaging on key issues like the economy and law enforcement may be resonating with Georgian voters.
A Mainstream Research/Florida Atlantic University survey of 1,053 American adults conducted between March 15 and 17 found that among likely voters, 47 percent would vote for Biden "if the election for president were held today" against 45 percent for Trump. Four percent said they would vote for "another candidate," while four percent said they were "undecided."
The AJC poll is in line with other recent polls showing Trump consistently ahead of Biden in Georgia. RealClearPolitics has Trump averaging 5.6% ahead of Biden in the state that he lost in 2020 by a margin of just .23%.
Despite his lead, the poll shows that Trump’s guilty verdict in his Manhattan “hush money” case has been influencing voter opinion there, at least among independents.
About one-third of the independent voters surveyed said the fact that he was convicted of all 34 charges against him makes them less likely to vote for him.
Nevada is expected to be one of the most important states in the presidential election, with its three electoral votes up for grabs in one of only a handful of true swing states. Biden won the state by just 2.7 percent in 2020.
The state also features a close Senate race this year, in which Sen. Jacky Rosen (D) is vying for another term.
The AARP poll found Rosen with a 5-point lead over GOP candidate Sam Brown among all voters, though Brown led by 5 points among older voters.
Split-ticket voters — those backing both Trump and Rosen, or Biden and Brown — could play a key factor, pollster Jeff Liszt predicted.
In his third presidential run, Trump regularly stokes fears about undocumented migrants, claiming without evidence the vast majority are violent criminals as he rails against Biden’s immigration policies. His language – including saying that undocumented immigrants were “poisoning the blood of our country” – has often drawn rebuke from his opponent’s campaign.
When Trump ran for president in 2015, he expressed support for some foreign nationals graduating from US colleges having a pathway to citizenship.
“I also want people of great talent to come to this country, to Silicon Valley for engineers. If you go to Harvard and you graduate No. 1 in your class, and you’re from China, they send you home, you can’t get back into the country. So you end up working for companies in China and fighting us,” Trump said in an interview with Time magazine.
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