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Kamala Harris Predicted to Win By Nearly Every Major Forecaster
Published Nov 05, 2024 at 12:06 PM EST / Updated Nov 06, 2024 at 12:17 AM ESTBy Martha McHardy
US News Reporter
As polls open, Vice President Kamala Harris is predicted to win the election by almost every major forecaster.
Nate Silver's latest forecast now gives Harris a slight edge in the Electoral College, projecting her with a 50 percent chance of victory compared to former President Donald Trump's 49.6 percent. The model shows Harris securing 271 Electoral College votes to Trump's 267.
This marks a shift from Silver's earlier predictions, where Trump held a narrow advantage. On Monday, Silver's forecast favored Trump with a 50.4 percent chance to Harris's 49.2 percent, and the day prior, Trump had a 52.6 percent likelihood of winning to Harris's 47 percent.
Other aggregators echo the close race but similarly give Harris a small advantage. FiveThirtyEight currently projects her with a 50 percent chance of winning, forecasting 270 Electoral College votes for Harris to Trump's 268.
Meanwhile, U.K. newspaper The Economist predicts that Harris will win 276 votes to Trump's 262—a scenario also reflected by forecaster Larry Sabato. Race to the White House predicts she will win 275 electoral votes.
Her largest win is predicted by CNanalysis, which forecasts that the vice president will win 308 Electoral College votes to Trump's 230, giving Harris a 70 percent of winning.
The only forecasters that show Trump is predicted to win are DecisionDeskHQ, which shows that Trump is projected to win 276 votes to Harris' 262, and J.L. Partners, which shows the former president will win 287 Electoral College votes to Harris' 251. DecisionDeskHQ shows Trump has a 54 percent chance of winning, while J.L. Partners shows he has a 60 percent chance of winning.
Newsweek has contacted the Harris and Trump campaigns for comment via email.
Since Harris became the Democratic nominee for president in late July, polls have been close, with Harris taking the lead for most of August and September, but at the beginning of October, the vice president saw her chances plunge as Trump made gains in crucial battleground states. Since then, the race has been virtually tied.
Recent polls show the candidates within just 1 and 2 points of each other. For example, AtlasIntel's latest poll, conducted between November 3 and 4, shows that Trump is leading by 1 point, while Research Co.'s latest poll, conducted between November 2 and 3, shows Harris ahead by 2 points.
In both polls, the candidate's lead is within the margin of error. Harris and Trump are also within 1 and 2 points of each other in every swing state, according to FiveThirtyEight and Nate Silver.