Nearly 80% of Americans say Biden won White House, ignoring Trump's
refusal to concede: Reuters/Ipsos poll
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[November 11, 2020]
By Chris Kahn
NEW YORK (Reuters) - Nearly 80% of
Americans, including more than half of Republicans, recognize
President-elect Joe Biden as the winner of the Nov. 3 election after
most media organizations called the race for the Democrat based on his
leads in critical battleground states, according to a Reuters/Ipsos
poll.
Biden - who needed 270 Electoral College votes to win - had 279 of those
votes to 214 for Trump with results in three states not yet complete,
according to Edison Research. In the popular vote, Biden got 76.3
million, or 50.7% of the total, to 71.6 million, or 47.6%, for Trump.
The Reuters/Ipsos national opinion survey, which ran from Saturday
afternoon to Tuesday, found that 79% of U.S. adults believe Biden won
the White House. Another 13% said the election has not yet been decided,
3% said Trump won and 5% said they do not know.
The results were somewhat split along party lines: about six in 10
Republicans and almost every Democrat said Biden won.
Edison Research, which conducts exit polling for Reuters and major media
outlets, called the race for Biden on Saturday after he expanded his
lead over Trump in Pennsylvania and appeared well on his way to amassing
270 electoral votes.
Trump has yet to recognize the result of the race. He prematurely
declared victory well before the votes had been counted and has
repeatedly complained without evidence that he is the victim of
widespread voter fraud.
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Combination picture of Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Joe
Biden and U.S. President Donald Trump speaking about the early
results of the 2020 U.S. presidential election, U.S. November 4,
2020. Pictures taken November 4. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque/Carlos
Barria
His claims have been echoed by members of Trump's cabinet. U.S.
Attorney General William Barr has authorized federal investigations
of "substantial" allegations of voting irregularities, and Secretary
of State Mike Pompeo on Tuesday said he foresees "a smooth
transition to a second Trump administration."
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was part of a broader survey that was
conducted Friday to Tuesday and included responses before the
presidential race was called.
It showed that 70% of Americans, including 83% of Democrats and 59%
of Republicans, trust their local election officials to "do their
job honestly."
The poll also found that 72% think the loser of the election must
concede defeat, and 60% think there will be a peaceful transition of
power when Trump's term ends in January.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online, in English, throughout
the United States. It gathered responses from 1,363 U.S. adults in
all, including 469 respondents who took the poll between Saturday
afternoon and Tuesday. The poll has a credibility interval, a
measure of precision, of 5 percentage points.
(Reporting by Chris Kahn, editing by Ross Colvin, Jonathan Oatis and
Cynthia Osterman)
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