close
close

Harris loses Biden’s lead in New York in 2020 over Trump Big

Harris loses Biden’s lead in New York in 2020 over Trump Big

Kamala Harris mocks Trump for sore spots in new interview

Vice President Kamala Harris he has a huge leader over the former president Donald Trump in New York, but is far behind the president Joe Biden It will be split with New Yorkers in 2020, according to a new poll.

Saturday New York Times/College in Siena vote found Harryis leading Trump 66-27% among registered voters in Trump’s hometown of New York. She led Trump 66 percent to 27 percent among likely voters.

Seven percent of likely voters in New York responded questionnaire said they were undecided. Harris’ largest support base was Manhattan, where 76 percent of respondents said they intended to vote for her.

Trump’s largest support base was on Staten Island, where he had 51 percent support. respondents, and in Queens – where he grew up – where 41 percent respondents said they supported the former president.

If polls are accurate, Harris is 11 points behind Biden, who won the city with 76 percent of the vote compared to Four years ago, Trump was at 23 percent.

The poll, which isn’t necessarily good news for Trump in New York, comes a day before his scheduled rally at Madison Square Garden. Friday, the Trump campaign he said about the rally: :

Today, President Trump announced the lineup of speakers for his historic Sunday rally at the legendary Madison Square Garden in New York City. The show features political icons, celebrities, musical artists, and President Trump’s friends and family who will discuss how President Trump is the best choice to fix everything that Kamala Harris has broken. This epic event, which will take place in the heart of President Trump’s hometown, will be a showcase for the historic political movement that President Trump built in the final days of the campaign.

New York Times/Siena College poll of 853 New York City voters conducted in English and Spanish October 20-23, 2024.

The poll showed a margin of error of +/- 3.8 percentage points among likely voters and +/- 3.9 percentage points among registered voters.

Have a tip for us? [email protected]