Kamala Harris (left) and Donald Trump.
The race between U.S. Democratic candidate, Kamala Harris and Republican Donald Trump is still too close to call, with just a day to go until Election Day as both candidates held several final rallies in some crucial swing states yesterday.
The election to produce the 47th President of the United States of America will hold tomorrow. Whipping up a lot of ground for support, both camps are fighting tooth and nail to win the battleground states to their sides as there is no clear winner yet.
Reports, as confirmed by the Election Lab at the University of Florida, revealed that more than 73 million Americans had already cast ballots on Saturday.
Trump and Harris engaged in a neck-deep campaign in the key swing state of North Carolina on Saturday, seeking to lock in more votes for the election tomorrow.
Many political readers described the North Carolina campaign as legendary as it marked the fourth day in a row that Vice President Harris and former President Trump visited the same state on the same day.
They noted that their campaign activities in the state highlighted how votes from North Carolina and few key states would decide the outcome of the polls.
Political analysts say past elections show that fewer of the young people, amongst which are the “Gen-Z Generation,” showed up to vote compared with older voters.
Based on political calibre and pedigree of the contenders, it is difficult to predict who is leading the poll; even underlying factors are playing some tripping roles especially in battlefield states.
Some polls show that Trump is slightly ahead of Harris in North Carolina while FiveThirtyEight’s latest poll tracker showed Harris ahead by a very slim 1 point, within the margin of error.
Neither the Republican candidate nor Democratic Candidate breached the 50 percent mark but Harris’s average is said to be 47.9 percent against Trump’s 46.9 percent.
Also, in the so-called Blue Wall states, which typically tilt Democrat but are considered swing states this year, Trump is slightly ahead at 47.9 percent to Harris’s 47.6 percent in Pennsylvania, while Harris is 1 percent ahead in Michigan and Wisconsin
Trump is ahead of Harris by 1 percent in Nevada, 2 percent in Georgia and North Carolina, and 3 percent in Arizona.
Of the last 321 polls in the battlegrounds, 124 – nearly 40% – showed margins of a single point or less, the pair wrote. Pennsylvania was the most “troubling” case, with 20 out of 59 polls showing an exact tie, while another 26 showed margins of less than 1%.
According to political readers, the battleground states do not presently tilt towards any of the contenders. The candidates are evenly tied at 48% in Pennsylvania, often seen as the most important swing state because it has the most electoral votes (19).
Nonetheless, The poll, jointly published by the Des Moines Register newspaper and Mediacom, showed Harris picking up support from women, particularly in older demographics and among independent voters who were not aligned with a political party.
Whereas, most Trump supporters are strongly counting on the huge trips that “infrequent voters” can avail for the victory of the Republicans, relying so much on the key roles played by Elon Musk and other cryptocurrency