The three-day poll, conducted Aug. 23-25, showed Republican
former President Trump's approach to the economy and employment
was preferred by 43% of registered voters compared to 40% who
preferred Harris's approach. The 3 percentage point difference
was too small to be significant given the poll's 4 percentage
point margin of error. A prior Reuters/Ipsos poll in late July
showed Trump with an 11-point advantage on the economy.
On crime and corruption, Harris and Trump were tied with 40%
support for each, showing more movement toward Harris, who
trailed Trump by 5 points in the July poll.
Recent national polls have shown Harris building a small lead
over Trump since she entered the race on July 21 following
President Joe Biden's decision to fold his campaign. The
Reuters/Ipsos poll from late July showed Harris up by 1 point,
43% to 42%.
It remains to be seen how the race will be affected by
independent candidate Robert F. Kennedy Jr's decision on Friday
to suspend his campaign. Kennedy, who had attracted the support
of about 8% of voters in a July poll, subsequently endorsed
Trump.
Trump's campaign speeches frequently criticize the Biden
administration's management of the economy as households
continue to feel the sting of several years of high inflation.
Harris has pledged to get prices under control through efforts
like cracking down on "price gouging" by grocers.
The new poll showed the economy was the biggest issue for 26% of
registered voters, compared to 22% who picked political
extremism and threats to democracy and 13% who picked
immigration.
Voters picked Harris over Trump on the issue of extremism by 42%
to 36%. Trump had an advantage on immigration policy, picked by
45% of voters compared to Harris' 37%.
Neither of the two candidates is broadly liked, with 59% of
voters saying they have an unfavorable view of Trump and 52%
saying the same of Harris. Harris was viewed favorably by 47% of
voters, compared to 39% for Trump.
The poll gathered responses online from 1,028 adults nationwide,
including 902 registered voters.
(Reporting by Jason Lange; Editing by Scott Malone and Deepa
Babington)
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