He also cites Biden’s presidential “deportment,” implicitly contrasting it with Trump. “We need leadership that is not (in) the news cycle all the time,” he said. “I get sick of that. I don’t want to hear that. I don’t want to hear controversy. I don’t want you involved in controversy all the time.”
Other swing voters also say they might change their minds before November, including 43% of independents. Nearly half of independent women, 47%, are open to persuasion, one reason the Biden campaign has focused so intently on abortion access as an issue.
Some groups that Democrats rely on in national elections say their minds aren’t firmly made up. That includes 37% of Hispanic voters, 27% of Black voters and 44% of voters under 35.
More than two-thirds of those surveyed (69%) say the country is “on the wrong track;” fewer than 1 in 4 (23%) say it is “headed in the right direction.” That’s a tick less positive than the nation’s mood in the March survey.
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