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2024 Presidential Forecast and Predictions

Last Updated: Thursday, September 19 at 12:11 PM EDT

Our model currently predicts that Kamala Harris has a 55% chance of winning the Presidency.

Prediction Updates

Last updated on Sep 18 2024 by Decision Desk HQ

Harris, Trump in Lockstep as First Ballots Go Out

Less than 50 days out from the 2024 presidential election, Democrats find themselves in as strong a position as at any other point in the cycle, largely driven by their change in candidates. However, the contest remains extraordinarily close. This is the key takeaway from polling conducted after the (likely only) debate between Vice President Kamala Harris and former President Donald Trump, and in the wake of a second assassination attempt on Trump last Sunday. Both campaigns are in a crucial moment, with the first mail-in ballots already being distributed.

Kamala Harris remains a slight favorite in the race for the presidency, but the margin between her and Donald Trump is razor-thin. With Harris projected to secure 226 electoral votes and Trump 219, the outcome hinges on seven key toss-up states: Wisconsin, Michigan, Pennsylvania, Georgia, Arizona, Nevada, and North Carolina, where neither candidate holds a clear advantage. All seven of these states were decided by less than 3% in either direction in the 2020 election. With the exception of Nevada (which voted blue twice) and North Carolina (which voted red twice), the other five states flipped from Trump in 2016 to Biden in 2020.

If both candidates win all the states in their solid, likely, and lean categories, the race would come down to the seven toss-up states. Harris would need 44 electoral votes from these states to win, while Trump would need 51. Trump's most efficient path back to the White House involves holding North Carolina and flipping Georgia and Pennsylvania, which would give him exactly 270 electoral votes. Harris’s clearest path runs entirely through the Rust Belt: she would also hit exactly 270 electoral votes by holding Wisconsin, Michigan, and Pennsylvania. As a result, Pennsylvania remains the state most likely to push either candidate above that critical threshold.

Electoral College Forecast

To win the Presidency, a candidate must secure 270 of the 538 available electoral votes, distributed among the 50 states and the District of Columbia according to population. Nebraska and Maine have unique systems: they award two electoral votes to the statewide popular vote winner and distribute the remaining votes according to the winners in each congressional district. This map categorizes states by each candidate’s likelihood of winning, ranging from 'safe' to 'likely' to 'lean' to 'toss-up'.

226

Harris

Trump

219

270 For Election

NM5SD3CA54KY8AL9GA16AR6PA19MO10CO10UT6OK7TN11WY3NY28IN11KS6ID4AK3NV6IL19MN10IA6SC9MT4AZ11NE2WA12TX40OH17WI10OR8MS6NC16VA13WV4LA8MI15FL30ND3ME2HI4 1 1 1 1 1

NE

State

2

CD-1

1

CD-2

1

CD-3

1

ME

2
1
1
CT 7
DE 3
DC 3
MD 10
MA 11
NH 4
NJ 14
RI 4
VT 3

Chance of winning the presidency

Our model is updated every day, blending the latest data on polls and fundraising with "fundamental" factors like incumbency and each district's partisan lean. This graph tracks each candidate’s probability of winning the presidential election over time.

Electoral College Projections

Trump: 262

Harris: 276

This graph tracks each candidate’s projected Electoral College vote share over time.

Chance of winning each state

This chart visualizes the current probabilities of each candidate winning individual states. Circles positioned further to the left indicate a higher likelihood of a Harris victory, while circles to the right suggest a stronger chance for Trump. Use the 'DEM' and 'GOP' filters to view states most likely to support their respective party’s nominee.

Electoral College Simulations

These graphs represent the distribution of outcomes from 14,000,605 simulations of the Electoral College vote for Kamala Harris and Donald Trump. The outcomes shaded in lighter colors to the left of the dotted line indicate scenarios where a candidate loses, while those in darker colors to the right of the line represent a win. Each bar shows the percentage of simulations resulting in that specific electoral vote count.

Our model currently projects a 0.4% chance of a 269-269 tie in the Electoral College.

Featured Races

Explore the latest probabilities in the most competitive presidential, Senate, and House races by selecting any of the races listed below.

Interested to see how the DDHQ/The Hill forecast works? Read our methodology statement.

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