USA TODAY US Edition

Poll: Trump and Biden are tied in Florida

Must-win state is split 45-45; 6% undecided

- Zachary Anderson Sarasota Herald-Tribune USA TODAY NETWORK – FLORIDA

The presidenti­al race is tied in Florida less than 30 days before the election, according to a Suffolk University/USA TODAY Network poll that shows President Donald Trump’s campaign is still highly competitiv­e in a must-win state despite a calamitous stretch.

Trump and Democratic opponent Joe Biden each is supported by 45% of voters in the poll, while 6% of voters are undecided, and the rest support third-party candidates or refuse to say who they back.

“You can’t get any closer than a 45/45 split; it really reflects the core support of the respective bases,” says David Paleologos, director of the Suffolk University Political Research Center.

Trump’s campaign had a series of setbacks last week, from a New York Times report that the candidate paid just $750 in federal income taxes in 2016 to a widely panned debate performanc­e and Trump’s positive coronaviru­s test, which took him off the campaign trail and put a spotlight on his virus response.

Despite the tumult, slightly more Florida voters (48%) approve of the president’s job performanc­e than disapprove (47%), according to the poll, which largely was conducted after the president’s COVID-19 diagnosis.

“Oftentimes, politics is like mixing cement,” Paleologos says. “In the early stages of a candidate’s life or in the early stages of a campaign, the cement is fluid, but as time goes on, it hardens, and I

think you have a hardening of support on both sides.”

The number of undecided voters in the poll runs contrary to the view that nearly everyone has made up their minds about the candidates. In Florida, there appear to be opportunit­ies to persuade voters, many of them independen­ts.

“That’s really a fertile area to do any persuasion. That’s the place to be,” Paleologos says.

Tabitha Hall, 40, a mother of three in Fort Walton Beach, is one of those undecided voters. She leans toward Democrats on abortion rights but more toward the GOP on fiscal policy.

“I’m one of those voters that’s on the fence because I feel like I need to know about the issues to make a decision, and

I kind of put it off until the last minute,” says Hall, an independen­t.

Working in Trump’s favor, a majority of voters (55%) say they are better off than they were four years ago. Fortynine percent support a Senate vote on Amy Coney Barrett, the president’s pick to replace the late Supreme Court Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg, compared with 44% who oppose voting on her nomination.

Forty-two percent of Florida voters rate Trump’s efforts to combat the coronaviru­s as “good” or “excellent,” and 13% say he’s doing a “fair” job; 45% describe his virus response as “poor.”

Hall rates Trump’s coronaviru­s response as “fair.” She doesn’t view the pandemic as a big factor in her vote.

“I hear the criticisms, and I’m kind of like, I don’t know, could it have been done differentl­y or better? I think it’s fair what’s been done so far,” she says, though she’d like to see the president wear a mask in public.

Independen­t voter David Lambert, 69, rates Trump’s response to the pandemic as “excellent.”

“He shut down the country right away, he’s provided all the medical necessitie­s that they needed,” says Lambert, a retiree who voted for Trump in 2016 and plans to do so again.

St. Petersburg retiree Pauline Ward, 81, says Trump hasn’t taken the virus “seriously enough.”

“I think he’s done everything to make everybody think it’s not a bad thing,” says Ward, a Democrat who voted for Hillary Clinton and plans to vote for Biden. “Even after he got it, he is ready to put himself in front of everybody even though he’s probably still contagious.”

More voters describe the economy as the most important issue facing the next president, rather than COVID-19, according to the poll. Their top issue is “bringing the country together.”

Trump’s support is overwhelmi­ng among voters who prioritize the economy; Biden’s support is equally strong among those who view COVID-19 as the most important issue.

Trump won Florida voters older than 65 by 17 percentage points in 2016, but Biden is up by 3 points among these voters in the latest survey.

Biden is up by 4 points with Hispanic voters in Florida, a group Clinton won by 27 points in 2016.

Among the more troubling aspects of the poll for Trump: 54% of Florida voters say the country is on the wrong track, and 24% say Trump won the first presidenti­al debate, compared with 41% who say Biden won.

 ?? POOL PHOTO BY MORRY GASH ?? Former Vice President Joe Biden says President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s response has cost lives during a debate Sept. 29.
POOL PHOTO BY MORRY GASH Former Vice President Joe Biden says President Donald Trump’s coronaviru­s response has cost lives during a debate Sept. 29.

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