Voters open to changing their mind are few and far between, but potentially important: ANALYSIS

Voters open to changing their mind are few and far between, but potentially important: ANALYSIS A close election may come down to persuadable Americans, those who don’t currently intend to vote for Vice President Kamala Harris or former President Donald Trump but don’t flatly rule it out. Persuadables are few and far between, especially among registered and likely voters; less favorably inclined toward Harris and Trump alike; and notably disengaged from the election. This includes 7% who don’t currently support Harris but say they’d consider voting for her, and an identical 7% who don’t currently support Trump but would consider voting for him, with a slight overlap of 1% who would consider both. Just 4% of registered voters and 2% of likely voters don’t support Harris now but say they’d consider her. This analysis, produced for ABC by Langer Research Associates, indicates slim pickings among persuadables, even though in a close race, every vote counts. Robyn Beck/AFP via Getty Images In results among all adults (for adequate sample sizes), persuadables are relatively disengaged. Only about a quarter say they’re certain to vote in November, compared with 63% of Americans overall. Indeed, roughly half of persuadables say they won’t vote given a choice between Harris and Trump, compared with 14% of all adults. They’re also more apt to be political moderates – 64% of those who are open to voting for Harris and 62% of those who are open to supporting Trump, vs. 42% of Americans overall. Twenty-eight percent of persuadable Trump voters favor a third-party candidate, as do 17% of persuadable Harris voters (a slight difference, given sample sizes). Attitudes Toward Harris and Trump ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll As with adults generally, the economy and inflation are by far the most important issues among persuadable adults. There are, however, some differences on issue importance: Persuadables are less likely than the general public to say that protecting American democracy and appointments to the U.S. Supreme Court will be highly important in their vote. Those who’d consider Trump are less apt than adults overall to say abortion, the Israel-Hamas war and race relations are highly important; and, compared with those who’d consider Harris, more apt to focus on immigration and slightly more apt to place importance on crime. Those who’d consider Harris are less apt than adults overall to say immigration is highly important; and, compared with those who’d consider Trump, somewhat more apt to focus on gun violence. Top Issues In Vote ABC News/Washington Post/Ipsos poll Demographically, persuadables are comparatively young — 30% under age 30, compared with 20% of adults overall — and have lower annual household incomes (41% less than $50,000, compared with 26% of adults overall). In all, among people who don’t currently support Harris or Trump, nearly nine in 10 say they wouldn’t even consider doing so. – This Summarize was created by Neural News AI (V1). Source: https://abcnews.go.com/Politics/voters-open-changing-mind-potentially-important-analysis/story?id=113074430

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