According to a new poll, former President Trump maintains a stunning 2.2 percentage point advantage over Vice President Harris in Michigan, a critical swing state.
The Trafalgar Group released a survey on Wednesday that inquired about the candidates that prospective voters in the Great Lakes State would support if the election were to be conducted tomorrow.
Trump’s support was 46.9 percent, while Harris’s was 44.7 percent.
In the poll, nearly five percent of respondents indicated that they were undecided, while 3.5 percent indicated that they were “other.”
Democrats comprised 35.9 percent of survey respondents, Republicans comprised 31.5 percent, and independents comprised 32.6 percent.
The majority, 77 percent, were Caucasian, and 74.6 percent were over the age of 40.
The survey revealed that 14.6 percent of voters were black, while just under 6 percent were Asian and Hispanic.
Additionally, approximately 5 percent identified as “other.”
The Hill/Decision Desk HQ polling index indicates that the Democratic nominee holds a razor-thin lead over Trump in the battleground state, with 48.4 percent support to the GOP nominee’s 47.9 percent.
The Senate race between former Rep. Mike Rogers (R-Mich.) and Rep. Elissa Slotkin (D-Mich.), who are both seeking to replace retiring Sen. Debbie Stabenow (D), was also a topic of discussion for respondents in the Trafalgar survey.
When asked which candidate they would support if the election were to take place tomorrow, 47.4 percent would support Slotkin, while 47 percent would remain loyal to Rogers.
The poll discovered that approximately 5.5 percent of respondents were undecided.
The survey was conducted from September 28 to 30 and had a margin of error of 2.9 percent.
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