Vice President Kamala Harris, along with every other Democrat across the U.S., just received a warning courtesy of the New York Times, which just put out the results of a recent poll it conducted with Siena College, and it’s sure to make the snowflakes in the crowd spring a leak, feeding our soil with their precious tears. The poll found that Harris is now tied, nationally, with former President Donald Trump in the current 2024 presidential race, which is only two weeks away now.
Things are shifting. For the last 3-and-a-half years, we the people have suffered through the failed economic policies implemented by the Biden-Harris administration. We’ve witnessed grocery prices soar due to astronomically high rates of inflation. Jobs have been obliterated and have been replaced by new government jobs, which, if you read between the lines, means Biden has expanded the federal government. That’s horrible, by the way. Censorship is running wild. The Justice Department is now a political weapon for the deep state. Things are not going well.
Americans are tired of it all. We want change. Trump will bring that in buckets.
The Times and Siena College poll took a survey of 2,516 likely voters between October 20-23 and discovered that the two nominees are now tied at 48 percent. The poll caused the RealClearPolitics average between Harris and Trump to hit 48.5 percent.
“The result, coming less than two weeks before Election Day, and as millions of Americans have already voted, is not encouraging for Ms. Harris,” the Times revealed concerning its most recent poll, going on to tell its audience, “[Democrats] have been looking to Ms. Harris to build a strong national lead as a sign that she would do well in such critical swing states as Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.”
One of the troubling signs was that only 28% of those surveyed believed that the country was headed in the right direction. “And voters continue to be pessimistic about the direction of the country, a measure that historically has been a danger sign for the party in power,” the outlet noted. The Times said that Harris appears to have weakened among likely voters since its last poll.
“Ms. Harris’s position, if anything, may have declined among likely voters since the last Times/Siena College poll, taken in early October. At the time, she had a slight lead over Mr. Trump, 49 percent to 46 percent. The change is within the margin of error, but The Times’s national polling average has registered a tightening in polls over the past few weeks as well, suggesting at the very least that this contest has drawn even closer.”
The top issues for the voters were the economy (27%), immigration (15%), and abortion (15%). On Those issues, Trump was trusted more on the economy (52%-45%) and immigration (54%-43%) while Harris was trusted more on abortion (55%-40%).
“I was very, extremely disappointed in her response to our immigration issue,” 27-year-old Larrissa Alexander said in a discussion she had with the Times. “And when she was first elected, that was one of the things that she was tasked with handling. And she accepted that responsibility. And then every time she was asked about it or pressed about it, it just was attitude-giving in return.”
Other findings from the poll include a pretty big gap between men and women when it comes to who they chose to support in this election cycle. The men were all about former President Trump, 55 percent to 41 percent, while the women were backing Kamala Harris 54 percent to 42 percent. None of that is shocking to be honest.
We’re only two weeks away from the election, folks. And this race could not be any closer than it is right now.