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US election: Kamala Harris, Donald Trump tied ahead of presidential debate - poll

Regardless of who wins the November election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, America’s allies are braced for intensification of the policies that have taken shape under Joe Biden. Photo / FT montage, Getty Images
Regardless of who wins the November election between Kamala Harris and Donald Trump, America’s allies are braced for intensification of the policies that have taken shape under Joe Biden. Photo / FT montage, Getty Images

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump and his Democratic rival US Vice-President Kamala Harris are effectively tied heading into the final weeks of the election, according to a US-wide poll conducted by the New York Times and Siena College.

Trump is up one percentage point - 48% to 47% - over Harris, according to the survey of likely voters released on Sunday, a difference that is within the survey’s three-point margin of error, meaning a win for either candidate in the November 5 election is within reach.

When looking at all registered voters in the poll, Harris is at 46% and Trump 48% - also within the margin of error.

Harris v Trump: The state of the US election as the race heats up

While the Trump campaign endured a relatively rocky stretch in the weeks after Democrat and current US President Joe Biden dropped out of the race in July, the most recent polling indicates the core of his support base is not going anywhere.

The poll notably showed voters feel they need to learn more about Harris, while their opinions on Trump are largely set.

In the survey, 28% of likely voters said they needed more information about the Democratic nominee while only 9% said the same about Trump.

The poll indicates that a presidential debate hosted by US broadcaster ABC on Tuesday at 9pm (11am on Wednesday AEST) could be a crucial moment.

Harris will have the opportunity to give more detail on her planned policies as she spars with Trump over the course of 90 minutes.

The race is so close that even a marginal boost for either candidate would be significant.

Since Harris replaced Biden atop the Democratic ticket over the Northern Hemisphere’s summer, she has hit the campaign trail hard but has limited her unscripted appearances and kept interviews with the news media to a minimum.

The key figures from the latest poll are similar to the last comparable New York Times/Siena College survey, released in late July.

In that poll, Trump was also up one percentage point, a difference well within the margin of error.

Polls in the seven key swing states likely to determine the winner of the election have also consistently shown a razor-thin race.