According to a survey by Napolitan News released on Thursday, Harris is up by Trump by just one percentage point (50 percent to 49 percent) among 788 likely voters in Wisconsin. Given the poll's margin of error of 3.5 percent, however, the candidates are considered to be in a statistical tie.
Some Republicans, most notably former Wisconsin Gov. Tommy Thompson, have encouraged Trump to come to the blue areas to counter Democrats’ margins.
When the elections clerk in Wisconsin’s heavily Democratic capital city of Madison announced on Monday that duplicate absentee ballots had mistakenly been sent to around 2,000 voters, it ignited concerns about election integrity from a Republican congressman and others on the right.
The race between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump has tightened in two of the Northern battlegrounds, New York Times/Siena College polls found.
El candidato republicano a la presidencia de Estados Unidos, el expresidente Donald Trump, lanzó una lista de agravios contra la vicepresidenta Kamala Harris durante un evento realizado el sábado diri
Vice President Harris and former President Trump are locked in tight races in the battleground states of Michigan and Wisconsin with less than 40 days before the election, new polling shows. The survey,
The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled Friday that Robert F. Kennedy Jr.'s name will remain on the state's presidential ballot, upholding a lower court's ruling that candidates can only be removed from the ballot if they die.
Independent presidential candidate Robert F. Kennedy, Jr. will be listed on Wisconsin voters' ballots after he tried to get courts to remove it.
The change comes as the former president has faced heightened threats in recent months. He was wounded in an assassination attempt at an outdoor rally in Pennsylvania in July, and Secret Service agents this month stopped a second apparent attempt on Trump’s life at his golf course in Florida.
Strong showings in new Times/Siena College polls leave a narrow path open for Democrats to keep hold of the chamber, but Republicans maintain an advantage with the map.
Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are essentially tied in the swing states of Michigan and Wisconsin, according to polls from the New York Times and Siena College published on Saturday.