New poll holds warnings for Joe Biden’s campaign

The survey found Biden struggling, despite many positive economic indicators, to persuade ordinary Americans that his policies are working for them.

A supporter of Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump displays a sign calling for the firing of US President Joe Biden at Trump’s rally in Greensboro, North Carolina, on Saturday. Photo: Reuters

Only one in four said the country is moving in the right direction, and more than twice as many voters said Biden’s policies had hurt rather than helped them.

Significantly, the poll found waning support for Biden among some normally reliable Democratic constituencies, including blue-collar workers and non-white voters.

And while Trump has unified his base to a remarkable extent – 97 per cent of those who voted for him in 2020 said they would do so again – only 83 per cent of Biden’s 2020 voters vowed to stick with him and a full 10 per cent now back Trump.

The Times/Siena poll also noted a dramatic decline in Biden’s support among less educated working-class voters of colour.

Trump says black voters like him because of indictments and mugshot

Four years ago, Biden won that demographic by 50 points but the poll suggested the margin over Trump had since plummeted to just six points.

Much can happen in the months before the November 5 election, and Trump is still battling four indictments and 91 felony counts, though his core supporters appear to shrug those off.

And while Super Tuesday should see the end of Haley’s challenge, analysts say Trump’s dominant primary showing hides stiff opposition to his candidacy among the moderate Republicans and independents he needs to defeat Biden.

Nor is it clear how many sceptical Biden voters might grit their teeth and support him again rather than see Trump return to office.

The poll of 980 registered voters had a sampling error of plus or minus 3.5 points.