Aggregated data from more than 20 independent polls shows that Arizona's race for the Senate is still neck-and-neck, showing the race remains within two percentage points, or the margin of error of any poll, GOP candidate Kari Lake's campaign said in an announcement Friday.
"Lake is surging and no amount of coordinated media spin will stop Arizonans from rejecting radical [Democrat] Ruben Gallego," the campaign said in an announcement. "State 48 deserves a fighter and that's exactly who Kari Lake is. The voters are with her and she's here to win."
In some of the top surveys:
- CNN/SSRS, for September: Out of 682 likely voters, Lake 44%; Gallego, 47%.
- NRSC Internal Poll/Peak Insights, August: 800 likely voters, tied at 46%.
- Club for Growth Action Poll/WPA Intelligence, August: 6,600 likely voters Gallego 48%; Lake, 46%.
- Kari Lake Campaign Internal Poll/J.L. Partners, July: 513 likely voters: Lake 44%, Gallego, 43%.
- AARP/Fabrizio, Lee & Associates/Impact Research, July: 600 likely voters: Gallego, 48%, Lake, 45%.
Arizona's recent open Senate seat races have been consistently close, the campaign also noted.
Democrat Sen. Mark Kelly won his race in 2022 by 5% over Blake Masters and defeated Martha McSally in 2020 by 2%.
In 2018, then-Democrat Kyrsten Sinema defeated McSally by 2%, and in 2018, Republican John McCain won by 13% over Ann Kirkpatrick.
"The competitive nature of these races underscores the inaccuracy of any poll showing a double-digit lead for either candidate in the current race," Lake's campaign said.
Sandy Fitzgerald ✉
Sandy Fitzgerald has more than three decades in journalism and serves as a general assignment writer for Newsmax covering news, media, and politics.
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