Harris seemed to have managed to narrow the gap between herself and Trump In the fields of economics and jobs.
According to the three-day poll that ended Monday, Harris By 6 percentage points based on unrounded numbers, she received the support of 46.61 percent of registered voters, while Trump received 40.48 percent support.
This is slightly more than the five-point difference recorded by Harris On Trump in a Poll Reuters/Ipsos On September 11 and 12, the margin of error in the latest poll was about 4 percentage points.
When voters in the poll were asked which candidate had a better approach to “the economy, unemployment and jobs,” about 43 percent of voters chose Trump, while 41 percent chose Harris.
Trump’s two-point lead in this area compares with a 3-point lead in the Reuters/Ipsos poll in August, and an 11-point lead in his favor in late July shortly after launching her campaign.
Nationwide polls, including Reuters/Ipsos, give important clues about voters’ views, but each state’s Electoral College results determine the winner, with seven swing states deciding the election.
The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll surveyed 1,029 U.S. adults online nationwide, including 871 registered voters and 785 likely voters.