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Warren, Biden Top New 2020 Democratic Presidential Polls

  Progressive Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren tops the field for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination in a new poll, though other voter surveys have former … Continue reading Warren, Biden Top New 2020 Democratic Presidential Polls


FILES) In this file photo taken on October 15, 2019, Democratic presidential hopefuls Joe Biden speaks as Elizabeth Warren (R) listens during the fourth Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidential campaign season at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio. Warren tops the field for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination in a new poll, though other voter surveys have former vice president Joe Biden in the lead. The fresh surveys landed as one of the race’s low-polling candidates, congressman Tim Ryan of Ohio, announced October 24, 2019, he was dropping out of the race. SAUL LOEB / AFP
Democratic presidential hopefuls Joe Biden speaks as Elizabeth Warren (R) listens during the fourth Democratic primary debate of the 2020 presidential campaign season at Otterbein University in Westerville, Ohio.  SAUL LOEB / AFP

 

Progressive Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren tops the field for the 2020 Democratic presidential nomination in a new poll, though other voter surveys have former vice president Joe Biden in the lead.

The fresh surveys landed as one of the race’s low-polling candidates, congressman Tim Ryan of Ohio, announced Thursday he was dropping out of the race.

While second- and third-tier candidates flounder, Warren and Biden have battled for primacy.

The 70-year-old Warren was backed by 28 percent of Democratic and Democratic-leaning independent voters in a poll published Thursday by Quinnipiac University.

The more centrist 76-year-old Biden, who has led most polling since joining the White House race, received 21 percent.

Liberal Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who recently suffered a heart attack, was at 15 percent in the Quinnipiac survey while Pete Buttigieg, the mayor of South Bend, Indiana, was at 10 percent, his strongest showing yet in major national polling.

California Senator Kamala Harris received five percent while Senator Amy Klobuchar of Minnesota was at three percent.

While Warren topped the Quinnipiac poll, Biden came out well ahead in a CNN survey published Wednesday and conducted by independent research company SSRS.

Biden was the choice of 34 percent of Democratic and Democratic-leaning registered voters in the CNN poll, which recorded his largest lead in the race since April, just after his campaign’s formal launch.

Nineteen percent opted for Warren and 16 percent for Sanders, while Buttigieg and Harris each received six percent and Klobuchar was at three percent.

Ryan for his part, barely registered in the recent surveys.

“I wanted to give voice to the forgotten communities that have been left behind by globalization and automation, and I’m proud of this campaign because I believe we’ve done that,” the Ohio Democrat said in a video announcing his withdrawal.

With such intense competition in the race to see who challenges President Donald Trump in 2020, Ryan’s campaign never caught fire.

Other lower-tier candidates like former cabinet member Julian Castro and Senator Michael Bennet are similarly struggling in the race that still features 18 White House hopefuls.

Warren has vied with Sanders for the progressive vote with bold ideas on health care and education, while Biden has campaigned as an experienced moderate who has the best chance of defeating Trump.

Biden has been the frontrunner in the crowded Democratic field longer, but Warren has been surging lately and drawing large crowds to her rallies.

Biden has also been caught up in the political turmoil surrounding Trump, accused of pressing Ukraine for damaging information on the former vice president and his son Hunter Biden.

House Democrats have opened an impeachment inquiry into Trump for abuse of power.

While Trump has repeatedly hammered the Bidens as corrupt in a bid to taint his possible 2020 election adversary, Biden’s resilience in the polls could give him fresh confidence heading into next month’s Democratic debate.

Eight candidates have qualified so far for the November 20 showdown, the cycle’s sixth debate.