Donald Trump has not won a national poll in around a week, with Kamala Harris taking the lead in at least four of the most recent polls.
Since President Joe Biden dropped out of the race and endorsed his vice president as the Democratic candidate in the November election, Harris has been narrowing a race that had seen Trump soaring ahead in the polls for some time.
By last Friday, Harris was leading in the national polling average, according to the aggregation website Race to the WH (White House), which collated 128 national polls and put Harris at 47 percent and Trump at 46.9 percent.
The polls which show Harris ahead were surveyed by poll aggregator 538 are YouGov/CBS News, RMG Research, The Economist and the Daily Kos/Civiqs.
YouGov/CBS News put Harris in the lead with 49 percent, compared with Trump’s 47 percent, after questioning 3,102 registered voters between July 30 and August. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 2.1 percentage points.
RMG Research, which conducted its survey among 3,000 registered voters between July 29 and July 31, found Harris has a lead of 47 percent on Trump’s 42 percent.
The Economist/YouGov has Harris at 46 percent and Trump at 44 percent, after interviewing 1,610 people, 1,434 of which were registered voters, from July 27 to 30, with a declared margin of error of +/- 3.3 percentage points.
Daily Kos/Civiqs put Harris at 49 percent to Trump’s 45 percent. Researchers surveyed 1,123 registered voters between July 27 and July 30. The poll has a margin of error of +/- 3 percentage points.
The last recent poll surveyed by 538 which shows Trump ahead is from a week ago, and was conducted by American Pulse Research & Polling, which had Trump at a 47 percent lead over Harris’ 46 percent. It was carried out from July 26 to July 29, and some 1,035 likely voters were questioned.
A more recent poll, carried out by Rasmussen Reports between July 24 and July 31, still has Trump in the lead with 49 percent over Harris’ 44 percent but 538, which is part of ABC News, dropped the firm from its reports for reportedly failing to meet its standards and being associated with “several right-leaning blogs and online media outlets.”
Aggregator RealClear Polling still shows Trump in the lead, in general, with 47.7 percent over Harris’ 46.9 percent. Its averages also show him in the lead in several swing states, including Arizona, Georgia, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Meanwhile, Harris is ahead in Michigan, New Hampshire and Minnesota.
Newsweek has contacted Trump via email, outside of normal working hours, for comment.