Polls by “select pollsters” are shown with a diamond. These pollsters have backgrounds that tend to mean they are more reliable. Also, polls that were conducted by or for partisan organizations are labeled, as they often release only results that are favorable to their cause.
For him or against him, young men see the election as all about Trump: From the Politics Desk Welcome to the online version of From the Politics Desk, an evening newsletter that brings you the NBC News Politics team’s latest reporting and analysis from the campaign trail, the White House and Capitol Hill.
A Republican-led group is challenging Georgia’s new requirement that poll workers count the total number of ballots by hand.
The shop's poll has only been wrong once in the past 40 years in predicting the results of the presidential race.
Polls by “select pollsters” are shown with a diamond. These pollsters have backgrounds that tend to mean they are more reliable. Also, polls that were conducted by or for partisan organizations are labeled, as they often release only results that are favorable to their cause.
Two in three voters say the country is on the “wrong track,” as voters weigh whether Vice President Kamala Harris or former President Donald Trump would be better able to change that less than two months from Election Day.
A suburban Philadelphia bakery’s cookie “poll” that started during the 2008 presidential campaign as a joke between the owners and their customers has grown into much more.
Republicans enjoy an advantage in the current election environment because more U.S. adults lean GOP and believe the party is better equipped to handle the country’s most important issues, according to a new poll.
In the battleground state of North Carolina, Donald Trump narrowly leads Kamala Harris in a new poll.  But his lead is driven by demographic strength among one group of high-propensity voters that
A beloved local bakery in Cincinnati, Ohio whose cookie poll has correctly predicted every election outcome since 1984 except the one in 2020, currently has former President Donald Trump leading.
Half of likely voters said they are highly confident that votes will be counted accurately in November, and nearly a third more said they were moderately confident.