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Harris, Trump in dead heat across swing states in Washington Post survey

storyp1> WASHINGTON, Oct 21 (Reuters) Vice President Kamala Harris and previous president Donald Trump stay in a tight contest throughout 7 battleground states with just two weeks up until the November U.S. presidential election, a Washington Post/Schar School poll showed on Monday.

The Democratic former district attorney led Georgia 51 to 47, while the Republican candidate was somewhat ahead in Arizona 49 to 46, both findings within the survey's plus or minus 4.5 percentage points margin of error.

Harris, who rose as the party's nominee after U.S. President Joe Biden stepped aside over the summertime, likewise had an edge in Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin-- three states where she will project later on Monday with previous Republican U.S. Representative Liz Cheney.

Trump led in North Carolina and was tied with Harris in Nevada 48 to 48, according to the survey of 5,016 most likely citizens surveyed from Sept. 30 to Oct. 15. The previous president will hold a rally in North Carolina in the future Monday after surveying current damage from Cyclone Helene.

Trump, 78, is making his third consecutive White House quote after losing to Biden in 2020. He continues to incorrectly blame widespread voter scams and deals with federal and state criminal charges over efforts to overturn the election results, to name a few charges. Trump has rejected any misbehavior.

Harris, 60, is a previous local prosecutor, state attorney general of the United States and U.S. senator looking for to restore the party's varied union of young voters, females and people of color as well as get some Republicans disappointed with Trump.

Monday's findings echoed other current polls that found a neck-and-neck race in the seven battleground states even as Harris holds an edge nationwide, according to some studies.

Overall, 49 percent of most likely citizens said they support Harris and 48 percent backed Trump, the Post poll revealed. Reuters/Ipsos polling recently discovered Harris holding a constant, limited 45%-42% lead over Trump.

Nevertheless, state-by-state results of the Electoral College will determine the winner of November's contest. The seven battleground states are likely being decisive, with surveys of their most likely citizens providing an indicator of the race up until now.


(source: Reuters)