Nationhood Lab poll: Harris Leads Trump by 4% Nationally, but with Wide Variation by Age, Ethnicity, and U.S. Regional Cultures

Trump has lost strength in Greater Appalachia, the Deep South, and the Midlands compared to the 2020 election, while Harris support in El Norte softer than Biden’s was

August 22, 2024

NEWPORT, RI— A new national poll from Salve Regina University’s Pell Center and Embold Research shows Vice President Kamala Harris leading former President Donald Trump by four percentage points among likely voters, but with large differences between age groups, ethnicities, and historically-based U.S. regions.

The poll of 2,696 likely voters was conducted August 8 to 15, before the Democratic National Convention, and has a margin of error of 2 percent. It found large generational gaps, with voters aged 18-34 supporting Harris by a 31-point margin, those aged 35-49 supporting her by a narrower 4-point margin, and those 50-64 backing Trump by 15 points. Likely voters aged 65 or older supported Trump by a narrower 2-point margin. People in the younger age categories were about twice as likely to still be undecided (7%) than the older categories (3%).

Trump leads white respondents by 7 points, while Harris leads with Hispanic respondents by 10, Asian-Americans and Pacific Islanders by 33, and Black respondents by 59. Only 4% of white and 5% of Hispanic respondents said they were undecided compared to 10% of Black and 12% of Asian-American and Pacific Islanders.

Few 2020 voters have switched loyalties, with only 2 percent of those who cast ballots for Trump or Biden saying they intended to support the other party’s nominee this time around. But Harris has a 23-point advantage with respondents who said they did not vote in 2020. White evangelicals haven’t soured on Trump either, with 88% intending to cast ballots for him, compared to just 16 percent of the religiously unaffiliated.

The poll was conducted for Nationhood Lab, a project at Salve Regina University’s Pell Center that studies the problems of United States nationhood and the threats to American democracy, and how to help solve them. One aspect of its work is to analyze regional differences over a wide range of phenomena in U.S. life using the American Nations model, which maps regional cultures based on rival settler-colonist patterns and the distinct institutions and cultural assumptions that followed from them.

Consistent with historical election results, the poll found wide differences in presidential preference between the American Nations regional cultures, with Trump ahead by 13 points in Greater Appalachia and 2 in Deep South, tied with Harris in the Far West, and behind in all the other regions, including the historic “swing region” of the Midlands where Harris leads him by 6. This represents a significant decline in Trump’s support since the 2020 election in the most reliably “red” regions. In that election, Trump won Greater Appalachia by 21, Deep South by 7, and Far West by 5, while losing the Midlands – which straddles historical swing states like Pennsylvania, Ohio, Iowa, and Missouri – to Biden by just 2 points. Harris’s margin of support is 8 points weaker in El Norte than Biden’s was in 2020, however.

The American Nations results have smaller sample sizes than the national poll and, thus, higher margins for error: from 4 to 5% in the more populous regions (Greater Appalachia, Yankeedom, Deep South and Midlands) to 10% and 14% in the smallest regions polled, Tidewater and the Spanish Caribbean enclave in South Florida. Results for the smaller regions should be treated with caution. The presidential preference question was asked as part of a larger poll that also queried registered voters, and the age and ethnicity results were from samples weighted to registered voters rather than likely ones, introducing the possibility of a slightly larger margin of error than the 2% in the topline question.  Embold Research’s statement of methodology is available here.

The Pell Center for International Relations and Public Policy is a think tank on the Salve Regina University campus in historic Newport, Rhode Island. Its programs on domestic and international issues are designed to generate new ideas, to expand public understanding of important issues and, ultimately, to help the public and its leaders make better decisions.  Dedicated to honoring Sen. Claiborne Pell’s legacy, the center promotes American engagement in the world, effective government at home and civic participation by all Americans. The Pell Center accomplishes this through research and publications, public events and media programs that run throughout the year.

Salve Regina University is a Catholic, coeducational institution of higher education, founded by the Sisters of Mercy in 1947. For more than 75 years, Salve has offered rigorous, innovative academic programming in the liberal arts tradition that prepares students to be global citizens and lifelong learners. More than 2,700 undergraduate and graduate students from around the world are enrolled at Salve in 48 undergraduate majors, 13 master’s degree programs, combined bachelor’s/master’s programs, and doctoral programs. Every undergraduate student engages in Salve Compass, a four-year transformational framework through which they develop the experience, skills, and wisdom required for a fulfilling career and to make a positive difference in the world. For more information visit salve.edu.

[This post was cross-published at Pellcenter.org]