Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump are virtually tied in Pennsylvania, according to a new Philadelphia Inquirer/New York Times/Siena College poll of likely voters.


About 48% of respondents said they supported Harris, and another 48% backed Trump, reflecting a dead heat in what many consider the key swing state.


Previous Inquirer/Times/Siena College polling in Pennsylvania, from September and early October, found this to be the case Harris with a lead of 4 percentage pointsindicating that Trump may have gained ground. In the more recent poll, people who had already voted for a third-party candidate were excluded from the results.


The new poll surveyed 1,527 Pennsylvania voters between October 29 and November 2. The margin of error was 3.5%.


Both the candidates and their running mates will make numerous campaign stops in the Keystone State during the final two days of the race. On Monday, Trump will hold events in Pittsburgh and Reading, while Harris has also done so planned a get-out-the-vote concert rally on the steps of the Philadelphia Museum of Art that evening.


The Times on Sunday also published polls from other swing statesin which Harris has a narrow lead in Wisconsin, North Carolina, Nevada and Georgia, and Trump leads in Arizona and Michigan.


This is a developing story and will be updated.



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