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Trump and Harris are closing the gap in swing states as the US election approaches its picture finish.

According to the New York Times' November 3 national polling average, Kamala Harris was at 49%, a dismal one-point advantage over Donald Trump, who is at 48%.

With just hours remaining in the US presidential election, the advantage between Republican candidate and former president Donald Trump and Democratic candidate and vice president Kamala Harris has shrunk to a close contest with the possibility of a picture finish.

The results of a recent poll by Siena College and the New York Times indicate that the election on November 5 will be a close contest, with the seven swing states potentially holding the key to the outcome. Nevada, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Georgia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and Arizona are the seven swing states.

According to the survey, the Democratic Party, led by Kamala Harris, is still ahead in Nevada with 49% of the vote, while Republican nominee Donald Trump is trailing with 46%. In North Carolina, Trump is two points behind Harris at 46%, while Harris leads at 48%. In Wisconsin, Harris maintained his lead with 49%, while Trump was lagging behind with 47%.

In Georgia, the election is close, with Harris leading by only one point with 48% of the vote compared to Trump's 47%. The results for the Democratic and Republican parties in Pennsylvania were tied at 48 percent. According to the poll, Trump and Harris were tied at 47% even in Michigan. In Arizona, however, Trump continues to have a sizable advantage with 49%, while Harris is at 45%.

Between October 24 and November 2, 1,010 voters in Nevada, 1,305 voters in Wisconsin, 1,010 voters in North Carolina, 1,004 voters in Georgia, 1,527 voters in Pennsylvania, 998 voters in Michigan, and 1,025 voters in Arizona participated in the New York Times/Siena College polls.

The New York Times' November 3 national polling average, meanwhile, put Kamala Harris at 49%, a dismal one-point advantage over Donald Trump, who is at 48%. In order to win the campaign for the White House, either party needs 270 electoral votes.



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