Politics

Trump gaining momentum with black voters, new poll says

Republican Donald Trump is gaining steam with black voters while Vice Pres꧟ident Harris is falling behind with the key group💙, which was polling at 90% for Democrats four years ago,

The New York Times/Sienna College released Saturday found 78% of likely black voter🐻s would support H💝arris, a slight increase from the 74% who said they’d back President Biden in a head-to-head contest with Trump.

But 🐻Biden, who dropped out of the 2024 race in July, captured 90% of the demographi꧂c when he beat Trump in 2020.

Republican Donald Trump is gaining momentum with black voters while Kamala Harris is losing ground with the key block compared to how the Joe Biden-Harris Democratic line performed in the 2020 presidential election, according to a new poll. REUTERS
The poll, released Saturday by the New York Times and Sienna College, found 78% of likely black voters would vote for Kamala Harris. MOLLY PETERS/EPA-EFE/Shutterstock

The decline in support could hurt Harris’ chances of winning key battleground states in November.

Roughly 15% of likely black voters said they planned to vote for Trump, a🐻 six-point jump for the former president from 2020. The remaining 7% polled were undecided orꦕ refused to give an opinion.

Much of the drop in Harris’ support is fueled by a growing⛦ feeling that Democrats failed to deliver on earlier promises, with 40% of black voters under 30 saying tꦫhe GOP is more likely to deliver on campaign commitments, the poll showed.

Like other constituencies, black voters are not happy with the economy under the curren📖t administrati🐷on.

President Joe Biden captured 90% of black voters when beating Donald Trump in 2020. Aaron Schwartz/UPI/Shutterstock

Nearly three-quar𝔍ters rated the economy fair or poor, while 73% said they had cut back on groceries because of rising prices and 56% said they had cut back often.

The poll, conducted Sept. 29 through Oct. 6, included 589 blacks nati🍰onwide and had a 5.6% margin of error.

Also on Saturday, a conducted by the Times, Siena College and Philadelphia Inquirer of two key battleground states — Pennsylvania and Arizona – found neither Trump nor Harris gaining a clear advantage heading into the final stretch of the presidential race.

Harris maintained a four-point edge in Pennsylvania, while Trump has continued his solid lead of six points in Arizona. The latest numbers are nearly identical to the similar polling a month earཧlier.