The McCourtney Institute for Democracy’s new Mood of the Nation Poll finds Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump locked in a close race for the national popular vote.
Forty-eight percent of the likely electorate plans to vote for Harris, while 45 percent plan to vote for Trump. Given the poll’s ±4.2 percentage point margin of error, as well as the five percent of the electorate that remains undecided, the lead in the race is unclear.
This poll also finds that voters’ preferences in the presidential race are related to their opinions about democracy as a system of governance.
The majority of both candidate’s supporters are also democracy supporters. However, Harris leads among voters who express strong support for democracy as well as those with moderate support for democracy, while Trump has a clear lead among those disillusioned with democracy.
The narrow three percentage point margin of likely voters who plan to vote for Democratic Party candidate Vice President Kamala Harris (47.6 percent) compared to those who plan to vote for Republican Party candidate former President Donald Trump (44.7 percent) is within this survey’s 4.2 percentage point margin of error. Five percent of voters are undecided, and three percent indicate that they plan to vote for someone else.
With the 538 national polling average showing Harris up by 2.5 percentage points and the New York Times polling average showing Harris leading by a three percentage point margin, these results are very similar to those from other national polls.
The results of this poll show that Harris has somewhat more support than Trump among traditional Democratic Party voters, including women, those under age 45, Black and Hispanic voters, and those with a college degree or higher.
Trump, on the other hand, garners more support than Harris among traditionally Republican leaning groups including men, those age 45 and older, white voters, and those without a college degree.
Neither candidate is drawing much support from voters expressing affiliation with the opposing major party. Trump has a lead among independent voters, 39 percent to 27 percent, but 20 percent of that group remains uncommitted. (Independents in this poll are narrowly defined to exclude those leaning toward the Democratic or Republican parties.)
This poll included a series of questions that allow us to better understand whether, and to what extent, democracy is on the ballot. The answers to these questions reveal divisions among U.S. voters.
The poll asks voters to agree or disagree with the statement: “Democracy may have problems, but it is the best system of government.”
Overall, 79 percent of likely voters agreed that democracy is the best system of government, with 54 percent agreeing strongly. However, 21 percent either took a neutral stance or disagreed.
A second question, appearing later in the poll, asked voters to choose among three statements, and then asked them how strongly they held that opinion. The results of this sequence show that 61 percent felt very strongly that democracy is the best system in all circumstances and 23 percent felt somewhat strongly.
As in previous Mood of the Nation Polls, a substantial number of Americans said that a dictatorship could be good in certain circumstances or that they were indifferent between democracy and dictatorship.
From the two questions, we created a summary of overall support for democracy as a system of government:
Michael Berkman, Penn State Professor of Political Science and director of Penn State’s McCourtney Institute for Democracy noted that observers have “expressed increasing concern about the erosion of citizen support for democratic institutions and practices, and these results add new evidence for the conclusion that support for democracy in the United States has declined in recent decades.”
As noted earlier, while strong supporters of democracy supported both major candidates, voters whose support for democracy is weak, including those open to dictatorship, disproportionately intend to vote for Trump.
Unlike many politically related opinions, support for democracy as a system of governance does not fall neatly along traditional partisan lines. For example, while a somewhat larger proportion of Democrats than Republicans are strong supporters of democracy (53 percent compared to 45 percent), the group that stands out most is political independents. A plurality of independent voters, 43 percent, show weak support for democracy.
The modest difference between Democrats and Republicans in support for democracy widens slightly when the alignment is around this year’s presidential candidates. One-third of those favoring Trump are weak democracy supporters, compared to half that proportion among those favoring Harris.
The proportion of voters aged 65 or older who show strong support for democracy as a system of government is much higher than among all younger age groups. In addition, support for democracy is higher among those with a college degree than it is among others.
“The pattern is concerning,” noted Berkman. “Limited support from young citizens who are not yet active participants in civic life is something we have seen for about 20 years. But but wide splits between supporters of the two major candidates puts us in new, potentially volatile, environment.”