A new American Greatness/TIPP poll shows that Donald Trump and Kamala Harris are locked in a polling deadheat tie in Georgia, with each claiming 48% among likely voters, including leaners.
22% of Georgia voters have not yet made up their minds about the race.
When asked about Kamala Harris reversing her positions on key issues, voters express skepticism regarding her motives. Regarding her reversal on the efficacy of a border wall, 31% of voters believe it was a “genuine conversion.” Among independents, 21% of voters accept her border wall reversal as authentic.
On fracking, 26% of Georgia voters believe Harris’s reversal to pro-fracking is genuine. Though Harris holds an overall lead among women voters in Georgia, 26% of women there believe that her switch to pro-fracking is authentic.
Regarding the media, 62% of Georgia voters believe that the media “is working in favor of Kamala Harris and against Donald Trump,” while 27% disagree with that statement, and 10% are unsure. Among Democrats, 43% believe the media works on behalf of Harris. Regarding the ABC debate moderators for the Trump-Harris debate, 59% report that they worked “in favor of Kamala Harris’s candidacy,” while 31% disagreed and 11% were unsure. Among Democrats, 42% thought the ABC moderators worked on behalf of Kamala Harris.
Ranking top issues, the economy was by far the biggest concern of voters, and by a 54-38% margin, Georgians say they were “better off” when President Trump was in office compared to today. By a 49-43% margin, they said they trusted Trump over Harris to lower inflation.
The second most pressing issue was immigration, consistent with most battleground surveys. On this topic, voters trust President Trump by a +22% margin over Vice President Harris, 57-35%.
In a state with a large military population, both active-duty and veteran, Georgia voters prefer President Trump on national security 51-40% over Vice President Harris.
About The Survey
TechnoMetrica conducted the American Greatness/TIPP survey from September 16 to September 18. The online study included a sample of 1,046 registered voters in Georgia provided by our panel partners. Using our likely voter model, we identified 835 respondents as likely voters in the November election. After the survey’s completion, TechnoMetrica weighted the dataset by gender, age, race, education, geographical region, and party affiliation to reflect known benchmarks from census, voter file data from the state, prior election results, and exit poll data. The weighted registered voter sample composition is 34% Democrats, 38% Republicans, and 28% independents. The survey’s credibility interval (CI) is ±3.5 percentage points for likely voter results, meaning the study is accurate within this range 19 times out of 20 if all registered voters in Georgia had been surveyed. Due to smaller sample sizes, subgroups based on gender, age, ethnicity, and region have higher credibility intervals.
American Greatness/TIPP Poll Results
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