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This was the first presidential election in which a candidate received more than 3 million votes in Ohio. Ohio is one of three states, the others being Iowa and Florida, that voted twice for Barack Obama and twice for Donald Trump. This ended Ohio's 14-election bellwether streak from 1964 to 2016.
Ohio was widely expected to be carried again by Trump in the November general election. [80] JD Vance's selection was seen as a strategic effort to bolster support in the Midwest (especially his home state) and among Trump supporters. Independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr. gathered enough signatures to appear on the ballot. [81]
Poll results can be affected by methodology, especially in how they predict who will vote in the next election, and re-weighting answers to compensate for slightly non-random samples. One technique, "weighting on recalled vote" is an attempt to compensate for previous underestimates of votes for Donald Trump by rebalancing the sample based on ...
The University of Akron Bliss Institute Buckeye Poll finds Trump leading Ohio. What else does it show? ... The poll of 1,200 registered Ohio voters shows Trump leading Harris 51% to 44% and Brown ...
A new poll by Reuters/Ipsos out Tuesday shows Harris and Trump nearly tied. The poll of 1,150 adults nationwide including 975 registered voters, conducted over three days ending Sunday, showed ...
Former President Trump has a 6-point lead over Vice President Harris in the state of Ohio, a new Washington Post poll finds. Trump won the Buckeye State by a similar margin in 2020, defeating ...
Former Vice President Joe Biden had been leading in most national polls, but President Donald Trump believed that the polls would underestimate him again. Although the polls had underestimated Trump's strength nationally and in Ohio, Florida, and Iowa, Biden won back the blue Midwestern states and made inroads in the Sun Belt to win the election.
NBC News poll: Trump, Harris tied. Harris and Trump are deadlocked in a poll released Sunday from NBC News, which shows both candidates with support from 49% of registered voters.