Amid posts about his canceled rally Saturday night and decrying the unwinding of presidential immunity by his political persecuting prosecutors, presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump posted about battleground polls favoring him on "trust to do a better job on the economy."
Trump posted the polling hailing his trust on handling the economy over President Joe Biden on Truth Social on Saturday afternoon, hours before a lightning storm in North Carolina would force a last-minute cancellation of his campaign rally.
The four key battleground states that decided the 2020 presidential election and figure to be instrumental in decided November's president-elect — Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin — all heavily favor Trump around double digits on "trust to do a better job on the economy."
It's the No. 1 issue for most voters in most election cycles, and the subject of the famed Democrat strategist James Carville mantra: "It's the economy, stupid":
- Georgia: Trump 59% (+22 points) over Biden at just 39%
- Michigan: Trump 54%-Biden 43% (+11 points)
- Pennsylvania: Trump 54%-42% (+12 points)
- Wisconsin: Trump 53%-44% (+9 points)
Those were four of the seven key battleground states Trump needed to win the 2020 election that was buoyed in Biden's favor due to mass mail-in balloting. Arizona, Nevada, and North Carolina are the others.
Among those seven, Trump won just North Carolina by 1.5 points. It was his narrowest victory of the contested 2020 election.
Trump delivered his message of having to postpone via phone from his private plane Trump Force One while circling above the airport tarmac awaiting his rally arrival.
Trump told the crowd to leave immediately because of safety concerns as lightning flashed at the rally site.
"I'm devastated that this could happen, but we want to keep everybody safe," Trump told the crowd, his voice relayed to loudspeakers at the outdoor rally at an airport in the presidential battleground state.
The polls cited by Trump were conducted April 11-16 among registered voters in those battleground states, and the results had margins of error of plus or minus 3 percentage points.
Information from Reuters contributed to this report.
Eric Mack ✉
Eric Mack has been a writer and editor at Newsmax since 2016. He is a 1998 Syracuse University journalism graduate and a New York Press Association award-winning writer.
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