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Donald Trump Gets Pennsylvania Boost as Democrats’ Voter Lead Drops


Former President Donald Trump is seeing a boost in Pennsylvania as Democrats have lost ground among registered voters in the crucial swing state.

More than 66,000 people registered to vote in Pennsylvania in August, according to data from L2 Data, a political data firm, that was reviewed by Newsweek.

Democrats led new voter registrations with 25,314 last month, while Republicans registered 23,839 new voters. There were also more than 17,000 “other” registrations in the Keystone State in August.

However, Republicans have registered more than 102,000 new voters in Pennsylvania this year through August, while Democrats have registered about 96,000, according to L2.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump
Former President Donald Trump speaks to attendees during a campaign rally on September 28, 2024 in Prairie du Chien, Wisconsin. Republicans have registered more voters than Democrats in Pennsylvania this year in a boost for…


Brandon Bell/Getty Images

And while Democrats still have 338,000 more total registered voters statewide than Republicans, the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette has reported that the margin is the slimmest Democrats have had in the state in decades and less than half of their advantage in 2016, when Trump won Pennsylvania by just over 44,000 voters.

Newsweek has contacted the Trump and Harris campaigns for comment via email.

Trump needs to carry at least one of the three swing states that make up the so-called blue wall—Pennsylvania, Michigan or Wisconsin—to get the needed 270 Electoral College votes to win the White House in November.

Vice President Kamala Harris, the Democratic nominee, is narrowly leading in all three states—Pennsylvania, Michigan and Wisconsin—according to most recent polls, and Pennsylvania is considered to be the closest race among them. If Harris is able to carry all three, as well as Nebraska’s 2nd Congressional District, she would win November’s election without winning any other battleground state, barring any shock results elsewhere.

But some Democratic lawmakers have expressed concerns that pollsters are underestimating Trump’s support in Pennsylvania and other battleground states, as they did in 2016 and 2020.

“Polling has really been seriously damaged since 2016,” Pennsylvania Senator John Fetterman told The Hill last week. “And that’s one of the truths, is that Trump is going to be tough in Pennsylvania, and that’s absolutely the truth.”

Kush Desai, the Trump campaign’s spokesperson for Pennsylvania, also told Newsweek recently that polls underestimate support for the former president in the state.

“Pollsters, the media, and ‘intellectuals’ have repeatedly failed to grasp the depth and breadth of support for President Donald J. Trump from the American people,” Desai said.

“Americans have a clear choice this election: another four years of rising prices, open borders, and incompetence under Kamala Harris or a return to the peace, prosperity, and stability of the Trump administration. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania is going to prove itself, once again, to be TRUMP COUNTRY in November.”



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