With Election Day less than a month away, new polling by NBC News showed the presidential race tighter than ever.
Abortion has emerged as the most important issue in the November election for women under 30, according to a survey by KFF — a notable change since late spring, before Vice President Kamala Harris entered the presidential race.
A big Trump lead in the state paradoxically adds to evidence of a smaller Electoral College edge for him. And a choice by pollsters may be causing them to miss state shifts.
Slightly more Americans see Vice President Kamala Harris as representing change compared to former President Donald Trump, according to new polling. In the latest New York Times/Siena poll, 46% of respondents said Harris embodies change more, while 44% said the same of Trump.
Republican Kari Lake is inching closer to Democratic Congressman Ruben Gallego in their Arizona U.S. Senate race, a new poll shows.
The Board of Elections is hiring election inspectors and interpreters, and will pay thousands of dollars for a 10-day shift.
Abortion has emerged as the most important issue in the November election for women under age 30, according to a new survey by KFF published Friday.
As the presidential election inches closer, abortion access is steadily becoming a more important issue for American voters, especially among young women. KFF poll findings released Friday
One of the central themes of the 2024 presidential election is that Americans exist within at least two different information environments. This has long been the case, of course, and this same divide affected 2016 and 2020 as well.
Two NBC news personalities discussed a noteworthy shift in polling for both candidates as the 2024 presidential election, currently at a "dead heat," is less than a month away.
Trump, who has made immigration the foundation of his re-election bid while casting doubt on election security following his 2020 loss, used Clinton's remarks against the Harris campaign, saying the man accused of killing Riley entered the U.S. days before Harris called the border "secure."