President Biden and former President Trump remain neck-and-neck in a hypothetical rematch heading into the 2024 presidential election.
RealClearPolitics, which tracks election polling, has both tied at 43.9 percent in an average of the most recent polls — positioning they have held since each announced their plans to run next year.
Here are some of the polls from this week:
Swing and a hit-or-miss: Trump, the strong front-runner in the GOP primary field, holds a narrow lead over Biden in key swing states, according to a new Bloomberg/Morning Consult poll of voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada, North Carolina, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.
Respondents in that poll ranked Trump at the top in Georgia by 5 percentage points, Arizona by 4 points, North Carolina by 4 points, Wisconsin by 2 points and Pennsylvania by 1 point. Meanwhile, Biden was up 3 points in Nevada, and the two candidates are in a statistical tie in Michigan.
Spoiler alert: Robert F. Kennedy Jr., a member of the vaunted Kennedy family who is running for president as an independent, could help Biden get a boost over Trump, despite Kennedy’s deep Democratic lineage.
An NPR/PBS NewsHour/Marist Poll found that in a three-way race, 44 percent of respondents picked Biden, while 37 percent voiced support for Trump and 16 percent for Kennedy. Biden’s lead narrows significantly when Kennedy is removed, with Kennedy voters jumping to Trump or remaining undecided.
Trump card: Trump has a slight edge over Biden nationally, according to a poll out Wednesday from CNBC.
The network’s All-America Economic Survey, 46 percent of registered voters surveyed said they are leaning toward Trump or would vote for him today. Another 42 percent said they are leaning toward or will be voting Biden, and 12 percent said they haven’t made up their mind.
BUT WAIT: A University of Virginia Center For Politics survey also released Wednesday has Biden ahead. In that poll, 52 percent of respondents said they are backing Biden, while 48 percent they support Trump.
Of note from the UVA poll: Respondents generally did not feel especially strongly about either candidate.