Poll: Only 39% Want Kamala Harris to Be Joe Biden’s Running Mate in 2024
Only 39 percent of likely voters in the United States want Vice President Kamala Harris to remain as President Joe Biden’s running mate in 2024, a Rasmussen Reports poll found.

Only 39 percent of likely voters in the United States want Vice President Kamala Harris to remain as President Joe Biden’s running mate in 2024, a Rasmussen Reports poll found.
Most likely voters agree with a congressional investigation focusing on the origins of the coronavirus and the government’s role in funding gain-of-function research at the Wuhan lab, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Wednesday found.
Most Americans feel as though they pay “more than” their fair share of taxes, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Friday found.
A Rasmussen Reports poll found that American adults say there are “more important” issues for companies to focus on than promoting causes like diversity and environmentalism.
A majority of likely voters in the United States said they prefer having the government shut down to having Congress approve more spending, according to a poll.
The majority of likely voters in the United States would prefer President Joe Biden to do “more of what Congress wants,” while a plurality thinks this new Congress will do better than the past two years.
Most likely voters are concerned about the U.S. national debt, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Monday found.
Only 33 percent of likely voters in the United States want to see President Joe Biden run for a second term in 2024, a new Rasmussen Reports survey released Tuesday found.
Only 36 percent of likely voters in the United States think the county is headed in the “right” direction, which is down from the previous survey, a new Rasmussen Reports survey released Monday found.
One in five likely voters consider Democrats, specifically, America’s “biggest enemy,” while voters in the highest income category are more likely to view Republicans as America’s greatest enemy, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Tuesday found.
Once again, Americans rank Christmas as their favorite holiday, and half of U.S. adults plan to attend religious services this season.
A majority of Americans still believe Jesus Christ — not Santa — is the reason for the Christmas season, a new poll found.
A majority of likely voters in the United States believe Arizona Sen. Kyrsten Sinema (I-AZ) made the right decision by leaving the Democrat Party and overwhelmingly agree that the “system” is “broken.”
Most Americans “remain concerned” about the economy under President Joe Biden, despite his claims that he is “building the economy of the future.”
The survey follows Elon Musk’s release of information showing that Twitter censored and blacklisted conservatives.
According to a poll, a plurality of likely U.S. voters opposes giving amnesty to an estimated 12 million illegal immigrants as Congress is reportedly making a last-ditch push on the effort in the lame-duck session.
A majority of likely Republican voters in the United States want to get rid of Sen. Mitch McConnell (R-KY) as Senate GOP leader, according to a recent Rasmussen Reports poll.
A plurality of likely voters believe that the House being led by Republicans will be “good for America,” a Rasmussen Reports survey released Monday found.
Most likely voters, despite how they feel about former President Donald Trump or his 2024 bid, agree that the Republican Party is still the “Party of Donald Trump” and the Make America Great Again movement, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Wednesday found.
Most voters disapprove of the way the media covered the highly anticipated midterm elections, a Rasmussen Reports survey released Thursday found.
A sizable group of participants in online political surveys appears to be affecting swing-state polling by answering every question as if they are Republicans, but then reporting that they intend to vote for the Democratic candidate, according to one major pollster.
The Republicans expanded their lead on the generic congressional ballot to seven points, with an 18-point advantage among independents, with 11 days left before the election, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll.
Republican Nevada U.S. Senate candidate Adam Laxalt and gubernatorial candidate Joe Lombardo are leading with Hispanic voters — one of the most important voting blocs in the state necessary for securing a GOP victory — by double digits, a recent poll found.
For those wondering why Democrats released The Allred against Republican U.S. Senate candidate Herschel Walker this week, it’s due to his surge in the polls.
The Republicans lead Democrats on the generic congressional ballot by four points, leading by 11 points among independents, roughly two weeks before the election, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll.
Republicans in the former Democrat state of Nevada hold five-point leads in that state’s U.S. Senate and governor races.
A slew of polling was released over the weekend showing Republicans hold the lead and momentum heading down to the wire, with three weeks left before the 2022 midterm election.
Only 26 percent of likely voters want to see His Fraudulency Joe Biden run for reelection in 2024, according to the latest from Rasmussen Reports.
The lead for a Republican candidate has nearly doubled since last week on the generic congressional ballot, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll released Friday.
Thirty-two days before the midterm election, the lead for a Republican candidate expanded to four points against a Democrat on the generic congressional ballot, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll released Friday.
Likely voters nationwide overwhelmingly oppose having sexually explicit books in public school libraries in addition to believing schools have an obligation to inform parents what children are being taught in classrooms.
The Republican candidates lead the Democrats on the generic congressional ballot by one point, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll released Friday.
The Republican candidates lead the Democrats on the generic congressional ballot by two points, according to Rasmussen Reports’ weekly poll released Friday.
Fifty-two percent of likely voters approve of Texas moving illegal aliens to “sanctuary cities.”
The Republican candidate’s lead over a Democrat on the generic congressional ballot drops to four points, a Rasmussen Reports poll revealed Friday.
A plurality of likely voters in the United States view the upcoming midterm election as a “referendum” on President Joe Biden’s partisan agenda, according to the latest Rasmussen Reports poll released Wednesday.
A Rasmussen Reports poll released Friday showed that the Republican candidate maintains a five-point lead over a Democrat on the generic congressional ballot for the third week.
A Rasmussen survey of 1,000 adults shows only 28 percent believe electric vehicles are “practical for most drivers.” Meanwhile, a clear majority of 54 percent say they are not. Eighteen percent are unsure.
A generic Republican candidate maintains a five-point lead over a generic Democrat, the same lead as the previous week, a Rasmussen Reports poll released Friday stated.
Only 32 percent of the public believe and trust the political media, according to a new poll from Rasmussen Reports.