Majority of likely Georgia runoff voters believe November election was ‘compromised enough to change the outcome’: Poll

New polling out of Georgia shows that the majority of voters believe the 2020 elections were “compromised” to the point where it could change the outcome.

“Our @trafalgar_group #GASen #Runoff #Polls also shed some light on Georgia voters opinions of whether the #Presidential elections were compromised enough to change the outcome,” Trafalgar Group Chief Pollster Robert C. Cahaly tweeted Friday. “All voters 53.2% yes, 37.9% no, 8.9% unsure. GOP voters 74.6% yes, 15.9% no, 9.5% unsure.”

The Trafalgar Group’s Georgia runoff poll surveyed just over 1,000 Georgia likely voters between Tuesday and Thursday and showed that both Senate races were essentially dead heats within the margin of error.

Challenger Jon Ossoff leads Sen. David Perdue 48% to 47.3% with just under 5% undecided, and Sen. Kelly Loeffler leads challenger Rev. Raphael Warnock by a margin of 50.2% to 45.3% with 4.5% undecided.

The margin of error for the polling is listed as 2.89%.

The Trafalgar Group was one of the most accurate pollsters in the 2020 election, especially in key swing states where the actual results lined up closely with what the group predicted.

The Georgia runoff set to take place in January will determine which political party controls the Senate for the next two years, and President Trump, who is still pursuing legal challenges to the election citing widespread voter fraud, is set to hold a rally in the Peach State on Saturday night.

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