Former President Donald Trump is leading President Biden across key battleground states, a Reuters/Ipsos survey found.
Nationally, the survey found both 2024 contenders tied with 39 percent support each in a head-to-head matchup.
However, Trump holds an advantage over Biden in key battleground states, which includes Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, Michigan, Wisconsin, Nevada, and North Carolina. Trump leads in the swing states with 41 percent to Biden’s 35 percent — a six percent advantage. That lead is well outside of the survey’s +/- 2 percent margin of error.
Nearly quarter of those in battleground states, 24 percent, remain undecided.
2024 National GE:
— Political Polls (@Politics_Polls) September 15, 2023
Trump 39%
Biden 39%
.
Swing States*:
Trump 41% (+6)
Biden 35%
.@Reuters/@ipsos, 4,413 Adults, 9/8-14https://t.co/lxUV0SdV69
*Georgia, Arizona, Wisconsin, Pennsylvania, North Carolina, Nevada and Michigan
The full survey was taken September 8-14, 2023, among 4,413 U.S. adults.
This trend, Trump leading in battleground states, has continued for months. A July Echelon Insights survey, for example, found Trump leading Biden in swing states by eight points, garnering 48 percent to Biden’s 40 percent. One again, that lead was well within the survey’s 3.9 percent margin of error.
🇺🇲 2024 Presidential Election Poll
— InteractivePolls (@IAPolls2022) July 4, 2023
(R) Donald Trump: 43% (+1)
(D) Joe Biden: 42%
(G) Cornel West: 4%
Swing States
(R) Donald Trump: 48% (+8)
(D) Joe Biden: 40%
(G) Cornel West: 3%
Echelon (A/B) | LVs | 06/26-29https://t.co/vAEWVxC8YL pic.twitter.com/oBG37GpEXT
A recent ForwardCarolina/Change Research survey also showed Trump leading Biden in the Old North State. Once again, the former president’s lead was outside of the survey’s margin of error.
Biden’s struggle to garner support among independent voters also spells trouble for the 80 year old, as a September Suffolk University Sawyer Business School/USA TODAY poll found 67 percent of independents, as well as one-third of Democrats, revealing that they believe the economy is getting worse under Biden’s leadership.
When asked who they trust to better the economy, 46 percent of independents said Trump, compared to 26 percent who chose Biden.
RELATED — Fmr. Obama Press Sec. Gibbs: Economy Must ‘Improve’ for Biden’s Polls on it to Go Up — Inflation, Interest Rates Are Up
Despite those realities, Biden took some shots at Trump during a Labor Day speech to the working class in the swing state of Pennsylvania this month, claiming that Trump “didn’t build a damn thing.”
“Guess what? The great real estate builder, the last guy here, he didn’t build a damn thing,” Biden said. “Under my predecessor, ‘Infrastructure Week’ became a punchline. On my watch, infrastructure means a decade, and it’s a headline.”
“When the last guy was here, you were shipping jobs to China,” Biden said, asserting Trump exported trips to China, despite firmly standing against doing so throughout his 2016 campaign and subsequent presidency.
“Now we’re bringing jobs home from China,” Biden asserted. “When the last guy was here, your pensions were at risk. We helped save millions of pensions with your help.”