The Guardian (USA)

Biden closes gap on Trump but third-party candidates pose danger, polls show

- Edward Helmore

Multiple new polls show Joe Biden strengthen­ing slightly in the US presidenti­al election, but suggest third-party candidates could present a risk to his chance of carrying the White House in November.

According to a New York Times/ Siena College poll released on Saturday,

Biden has whittled down the four-point lead Donald Trump held in February, with Trump leading Biden 46% to 45% among registered voters.

The narrowing of support for the candidates seven months before election day comes as Trump is likely to be largely off the campaign and fundraisin­g trail for the next six weeks while he attends a criminal trial in New York over pre-2016 election hush money payments.

Despite the narrowing of Trump’s lead that the New York Times poll found, the survey located a worrying issue for Democrats: some voters recalled Trump’s 2016-20 presidency, despite his capacity to sow divisivene­ss and chaos, as a time of economic prosperity and strong national security.

Before 2020 election, only 39% of voters said that the country was better off after Trump took office – a figure that has risen in the intervenin­g years with a Democrat in the White House.

According to the New York Times, 42% now view Trump’s term as better for the country than the Biden administra­tion, compared with 25% who say the opposite and an additional 25% saying Biden has been “mostly bad” for the country.

Approval of Trump’s handling of the economy was also up 10% over the past four years.

A separate study of 1,265 registered voters released on Sunday by I&I/Tipp showed Biden at 43% and Trump at 40% if no other choices are in the mix.

Poll respondent­s were asked who they preferred in a two-candidate contest, with the option to chose “other”

and “not sure” – options that both returned 9% of those polled. That 18% figure of the total vote, editor Terry Jones of Issues & Insights wrote, showed that Biden and Trump “are not opposing against one another in a vacuum”.

Asked a follow-up question that added the independen­t candidates Robert F Kennedy Jr, an environmen­tal lawyer and vaccine sceptic, the Harvard professor Cornel West, and the Green party figure Jill Stein, Biden took the greater hit to his support, leveling with Trump at 38%.

With Kennedy at 11%, West at 2%, and Stein at 1%, Jones calculated that Kennedy’s presence siphoned off five points of Biden’s support to Trump’s two.

“This is not surprising, given that RFK Jr is on most issues a traditiona­l progressiv­e leftist, which makes him indistingu­ishable from the current leadership of the Democratic party,” Jones wrote.

According to the Kennedy campaign, the candidate and vice-presidenti­al pick Nicole Shanahan currently have enough signatures to get on the ballots of just six states: Hawaii, Nevada, Utah, Idaho, North Carolina and New Hampshire.

Earlier this month, third-party group No Labels announced it would not field a “unity ticket” candidate after reaching out to 30 potential people and raising $60m despite assessing that “Americans remain more open to an independen­t presidenti­al run and hungrier for unifying national leadership than ever before”.

The group said it would only offer a candidate if it could identify a candidate with a “credible path” to the White House.

“No such candidates emerged, so the responsibl­e course of action is for us to stand down,” it said.

Kennedy, who has consistent­ly denied his candidacy is in effect a “spoiler” to Democratic hopes of retaining the White House, is not the only worry for the party currently holding executive power.

Polls are wildly conflictin­g. A recent Rasmussen survey found that Biden trails Trump regardless of third-party candidates.

In a two-way contest between Biden and Trump, 49% of likely US voters said they would choose Trump, and 41% would vote for Biden. That was a marginal increase for Trump since February, when he led by six points.

That same poll found 8% would vote for some other candidate, virtually matching the I&I/Tipp findings.

 ?? Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP ?? Joe Biden at the White House on Friday.
Photograph: Alex Brandon/AP Joe Biden at the White House on Friday.

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