Democrat Gary Peters maintains lead in Michigan U.S. Senate race: Reuters/Ipsos poll

FAN Editor
FILE PHOTO: Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Biden campaigns in Flint
FILE PHOTO: U.S. Senator Gary Peters speaks at a campaign drive-in, get-out-the-vote event with Democratic presidential nominee Joe Biden and former U.S. President Barack Obama in Flint, Michigan, U.S., October 31, 2020. REUTERS/Brian Snyder

November 1, 2020

By Chris Kahn

(Reuters) – Democratic U.S. Senator Gary Peters of Michigan leads his Republican challenger, John James, by seven points with days to go before an election that will determine which party controls the Senate, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed on Sunday.

About 12 competitive U.S. Senate races are up for grabs in next Tuesday’s election, 10 with vulnerable Republican incumbents and two with vulnerable Democrats. To have a majority in the Senate, Democrats need to pick up three seats if the party wins the White House, which gives the vice president a tie-breaking vote, and four if not.

    Here are the latest results for three Senate races on which Reuters/Ipsos is polling:

MICHIGAN (Oct. 21-27 poll)

* Voting for Democratic Senator Gary Peters: 51%

* Voting for Republican challenger John James: 44%

* Peters led James 50%-44% in the prior week.

* 37% of adults said they had already voted.

ARIZONA (Oct. 21-27 poll)

* Voting for Democratic challenger and former astronaut Mark Kelly: 51%

* Voting for Republican Senator Martha McSally: 44%

* The results are identical to a prior poll.

* 37% said they had already voted.

NORTH CAROLINA (Oct. 21-27 poll)

* Voting for Democratic challenger Cal Cunningham: 48%

* Voting for Republican Senator Thom Tillis: 47%

* The race is statistically tied because the difference between the two is within the survey’s credibility interval, as it was the prior week when Cunningham and Tillis were even at 47%-47%.

* 35% said they had already voted.

   

NOTES: The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online and in English. The Michigan poll surveyed 654 likely voters and had a credibility interval of 4 percentage points. The earlier Arizona survey included 714 likely voters and had a credibility interval of 4 percentage points. North Carolina’s surveyed 647 likely voters and had a credibility interval of 4 percentage points.

(Reporting by Chris Kahn; Editing by Richard Chang)

Free America Network Articles

Leave a Reply

Next Post

Protests erupt over fatal shooting of Black man by deputies in Washington

With tensions already running high over the fatal shooting of a 21-year-old Black man by sheriff’s deputies, protests this weekend in Vancouver, Washington, devolved into reported vandalism of businesses and fights between demonstrators demanding justice and members of right-wing groups that converged in the city. Kevin Peterson Jr. was shot […]

You May Like