2024 Election Is The Closest Presidential Race In At Least 60 Years: Polls
The 2024 presidential election cycle is the first time in at least 60 years that a single candidate hasnât been ahead 5 points or more in the polls for three-plus weeks, according to an analysis by Harry Enten, host of CNNâs Margins of Error. That margin has existed in every campaign since 1964, Enten explained, except this oneâincluding when President Joe Biden was still running.
âThe race has been consistently close in a way Iâve never seen,â Enten wrote on X. âThe bottom line is this election is up for grabs with 2 months to go.â
Several national and battleground state polls show Vice President Kamala Harris and former president Donald Trump either tied or within a few percentage points of one anotherâthe results seeming to hover squarely within margins of error.
Pollsters in this election have had a uniquely tumultuous campaign to track. From Bidenâs fraught debate performance in June to the failed assassination attempt on Trump in July, followed by Biden bowing out of the race and Harrisâs energized and expedited summer campaign, itâs felt like each week has brought another unprecedented event for Americans to weigh in on.
Plus, according to a Pew Research Center report, the mere presence of Trump on the ballot can negatively impact the reliability of polling. âCompared with other elections in the past 20 years, polls have been less accurate when Donald Trump is on the ballot,â Pewâs vice president Courtney Kennedy and senior survey advisor Scott Keeter wrote.
This discrepancy, they found, is likely due to two things. First, pollsters often use past election turnout to predict who will vote in the upcoming race, and âresearch has found that Trump is popular among people who tend to sit out midterms but turn out for him in presidential election years.â Second, Kennedy and Keeter note, âRepublicans in the Trump era have become a little less likely than Democrats to participate in polls.â
In addition to documenting a historically close race, pollsters have been tracking what issues are driving voters to the ballot box this year.
An August Economist/YouGov poll of 1,567 American adults found that âInflation/pricesâ was the top issue on votersâ minds, at 24%, followed by âJobs and the economyâ at 13%, and âImmigrationâ at 12%.
A set of New York Times/Siena College polls of registered voters in seven battleground states conducted from August 6 to 15 found that âFor women younger than 45, abortion has overtaken the economy as the single most important issue to their vote.â
Throughout the 2024 campaign cycle, one thing has remained notably clear: this election could be decided by just a few key battleground states.
Democratic voters in Omaha, Nebraska, have been putting signs in their yards with a singular blue dot, a symbol of Harrisâs potential stronghold in a red state. Nebraska is one of only two states that awards electoral votes by congressional district, rather than by statewide winner.
âFor all of the pathways for Harris and Trump to reach the White House,â CNNâs Jeff Zeleny writes, âthe race for 270 electoral votes could come down to Nebraskaâs sprawling 2nd District covering Omaha and parts of two nearby counties, which hold many similarities to suburban areas across the country.â
On top of Omahaâs blue dot, the final tallies in seven statesâMichigan, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Georgia, Arizona, and Nevadaâmay grant either Trump or Harris the 270 needed to win.
In the case of an Electoral College tie, a centuries-old constitutional mechanism could end up deciding the election. If both Harris and Trump take home 269 Electoral College votes, the House would decide the election, per the 12th Amendmentâthat hasnât happened since 1824.
Should it be tossed to the House, each state delegation would be allotted one vote. Currently, Republicans control 26 House delegations; Democrats control 22, and two others are tied. Meaning, Trump could lose the popular voteâas he has the last two times heâs run for executive officeâtie in the general election, and still end up in the White House.
A close election could exacerbate already percolating right-wing theories of voter fraudâand risk a revival of Trumpâs 2020 Big Lie, the unfounded claim that the election was stolen from him by Biden.