Trump leads Biden in 5 of 6 key swing states, says N.Y. Times/Siena College poll November 7, 2023By Kate Scanlon OSV News Filed Under: 2024 Election, Feature, News, World News Former President Donald Trump led President Joe Biden in five out of six key battleground states, according to a new poll by The New York Times and Siena College, a Franciscan-run school in Loudonville, N.Y. But the poll also revealed key weaknesses for both candidates and found that a majority of the same voters support legal abortion. Trump led Biden with voters in Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Nevada and Pennsylvania by margins of 4 to 10 percentage points, according to the poll, with Biden leading Trump in Wisconsin by 2 points. In the 2020 election between the same two men, Biden carried each of those six states. President Joe Biden is trailing in five of six battleground states, according to a poll by the New York Times and Siena College. (OSV News photo/Leah Millis, Reuters) With the 2024 election about a year away, the poll found both men are unpopular with voters, with some expressing frustration with Biden’s economic policies or concern over his age. Biden is 80, while Trump is 77. However, others expressed concerns about Trump’s criminal indictments and said they view him as a threat to democracy. A plurality of voters view Trump — who has not yet formally secured his party’s nomination in his third bid for the White House but currently leads his GOP rivals in polling — as a threat to Democracy, the poll found. Trump has never conceded defeat in the 2020 election and sought to overturn the election results to remain in office. In a statement, Don Levy, director of Siena College Research Institute, said, “Despite former President Donald Trump leading President Joe Biden in five of six battleground states, a plurality of voters, 41 percent, in those states in this New York Times/Siena College poll say that Trump is ‘bad for democracy,’ compared to 31 percent who say he’s ‘good for democracy,’ and 25 percent who say he’s ‘neither good nor bad for democracy.'” “Pluralities of between 36 percent and 47 percent of voters in each state says Trump’s bad for democracy,” Levy added in a statement. However, when presented with a choice between Trump and a generic Democrat, voters favored the Democrat by 12 points, the poll found. It also found that a generic Republican would lead Biden by a higher margin than Trump. The poll also found that voters in those same states said abortion should be legal in most circumstances. “Across the six states, 62 percent of voters say abortion should always or mostly be legal, compared to 30 percent who say it should always or mostly be illegal,” Levy said. “Net support for abortions being legal ranges from 26 points in Georgia to 40 points in Nevada. While there is only a small gender gap — women say legal by 38 points and men by 25 points — there is a wide partisan divide, with 84 percent of Democrats and 68 percent of independents saying legal, and 54 percent of Republicans saying illegal.” On proposals to implement a federal ban on elective abortions after 15 weeks, “the gap narrows, with 51 percent opposing and 42 percent supporting,” Levy said. “While Wisconsin voters support that proposal by five points, voters in the other five states oppose it by between seven and 20 points,” he said. Read More 2024 Elections Trump names CatholicVote’s Brian Burch as next Holy See ambassador Marquette poll: Public rates Biden at all-time low, splits on Trump Cabinet picks Trump’s pro-union labor secretary pick surprises some, faces criticism on abortion No sanctuary? Trump reportedly plans to reverse policy, permit ICE arrests at churches Pro-life advocates grapple with Trump’s lack of clarity on abortion pills, next term’s policy Post-election migration perspective and implications for policy Copyright © 2023 OSV News Print