Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden leads President Donald Trump in the battleground states of Nevada, Ohio, and Pennsylvania.
That’s according to several Fox News statewide likely voter surveys.
In each of the three states, majorities disapprove of the job Trump is doing as president, pluralities say coronavirus is “not at all” under control, and Biden is the preferred choice when it comes to handling the virus.
Plus, he’s favored over Trump to nominate the next U.S. Supreme Court justice.
There are few undecided voters, and Biden’s support is 50 percent or better in each state.
His advantage over Trump is outside the margin of error in Nevada and Pennsylvania, but not Ohio.
Across the states, Biden’s edge comes mainly from women, nonwhites, voters under age 35, and those ages 65 and over.
When it comes to handling coronavirus in particular, more seniors trust Biden to do a better job than Trump — in larger numbers than back his candidacy overall.
About 9 in 10 of both Biden and Trump supporters in each state are extremely or very interested in the election.
All interviews were completed after the September 18 death of Justice Ruth Bader Ginsburg.
Likely voters in Pennsylvania favor Biden over Trump, 51-44 percent.
In 2016, Trump narrowly won Pennsylvania (by less than one percentage point).
It was the first time since 1988 that a Republican presidential candidate had won the state.
Eight percent of those who backed him in 2016 are Biden supporters today.
Trump’s 45 percent job approval narrowly lags the 48 percent vote share he received in 2016.
Some 54 percent of Keystone State voters disapprove of his job performance.
He is ahead by 4 points among men, 6 points among White voters, 17 points among Whites without a college degree, and 8 points among rural voters.
Biden is favored by nonwhites (+74 points), women (+17), seniors (+8), union households (+6), and suburban voters (+5).
His advantage climbs to 18 points among suburban women.
“Trump’s surprise 2016 win in Pennsylvania was driven by his mobilization of voters in the northern and central regions of the state,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducts the Fox News survey with Democrat Chris Anderson. “He needs that kind of support again and a slight tick up among suburban voters to pull even here.”
Hispanic likely voters favor Biden in the presidential race — and that helps give him a 52-41 percent lead over Trump in Nevada.
Biden leads by 8 points among seniors, 15 points among women, and 36 points among voters under age 35.
Hispanics favor him by 28 points (61-33 percent).
That is similar to the 31-point advantage Hillary Clinton received among Nevada Hispanic voters in 2016.
Trump is ahead by 2 points among Whites, 7 points among Whites without a college degree, and 12 among rural voters.
Party strength matters.
Biden gets the support of 93 percent of Democrats and 9 percent of Republicans.
Trump has the backing of 87 percent of Republicans and 4 percent of Democrats.
The small subgroup of independents pick Biden by 6 points.
Nevada voters trust Biden to do a better job than Trump on coronavirus by 15 points, nominating the next Supreme Court justice by 10, and policing and criminal justice by 8.
The largest number of Nevada voters, 42 percent, think coronavirus is “not at all” under control, and almost all of them back Biden.
Majorities of those saying it is completely/mostly or somewhat under control support Trump.
It’s a 5-point race in Ohio, Biden 50 percent vs. Trump 45 percent.
Here’s why it’s tight.
Men back the president by 4 points, while women go for Biden by 14.
White voters without a college degree pick Trump by 18 points, while Whites with a degree back Biden by 7.
And Trump is the choice among rural voters by 17 points, while suburbanites like Biden by 10.
Biden’s overall advantage comes mainly from his 75-point lead among nonwhites. Whites favor Trump by 7.
Ohio voters think Biden is better on coronavirus (+14 points) and nominating the next Supreme Court justice (+6).
They think Trump is better on the economy (+5), while the two are closely matched on policing and criminal justice (Biden +2).
Half of Ohioans (51 percent) say they are holding steady financially, while the rest split between falling behind (27 percent) and getting ahead (21 percent).
On whether coronavirus is under control, 28 percent think it is completely/mostly under control, 31 percent say somewhat, and a 38 percent plurality says “not at all.”
That leads to mixed marks for the president’s job performance: 47 percent approve, while 51 percent disapprove.
Trump won Ohio in 2016 by 8 points, receiving about 52 percent of the vote.
No Republican has ever reached 270 electoral votes and won the White House without winning the Buckeye State.