Many Americans are getting contacted by the Harris and Trump campaigns to ask for their vote

New ABC News/Ipsos polling details how Americans are being contacted by the campaigns

The author(s)
  • Chris Jackson Senior Vice President, US, Public Affairs
  • Mallory Newall Vice President, US, Public Affairs
  • Sarah Feldman Editorial Director, US, Public Affairs
  • Charlie Rollason Senior Research Manager, US, Public Affairs
  • Johnny Sawyer Senior Research Manager, US, Public Affairs
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Washington, DC, October 15, 2024 — New ABC News/Ipsos polling finds that many Americans have been contacted about their vote by Vice President Kamala Harris’ and former President Donald Trump’s campaigns. Text is the most common way Americans report being approached. Among the people who have been contacted, a minority say the campaigns have offered assistance, most commonly with voter registration. Read more on ABC News.

For more ABC News releases from this poll, follow these links:

Trump and Harris are locked in a tight race weeks before the election

Most Americans feel both campaigns lack policy details as election approaches

Detailed findings:

1. Many Americans report being contacted by the Harris or Trump campaigns to ask for their vote.

  • One in four (26%) Americans say the Trump campaign has contacted them, while 30% say the Harris campaign has contacted them for their vote.
  • Text message is the most common way people report being contacted for their vote; seventeen percent report the Harris campaign and 14% report the Trump campaign has contacted them in this way.
  • However, 69% say the Harris campaign has not contacted them, and 73% say the same about the Trump campaign. Some Americans report that the Harris and Trump campaigns are contacting them for their vote

2. Among people who have been contacted about who they are voting for by the campaign(s), most say they have not been offered assistance.

  • A majority of people who have been contacted by the Harris or Trump campaigns say they have not been offered assistance in any of the ways tested (55% and 64%, respectively).
  • However, some report being offered assistance. Among the people who say the campaigns contacted them, 43% say the Harris campaign provided help, and 35% say the same of the Trump campaign.
  • Voter registration is the most common help each campaign offers (27% for Harris and 22% for Trump).

About the Study

This ABC News/Ipsos poll was conducted October 4 to 8, 2024, by Ipsos using the probability-based KnowledgePanel®. Invitations were sent to 4,550 panelists, resulting in 2,631 completed interviews. In quality control, 51 respondents were removed for skipping half or more of the questions or completing the survey in the fastest 1 percent times. For more precise analysis, the survey includes oversamples of N=125 Black people, N=153 Hispanic people and N=147 people age 18-29, with these groups scaled to their correct proportion of the population in weighting.

The survey was conducted using KnowledgePanel, the most well-established online probability-based panel that is representative of the adult US population. Our recruitment process employs a scientifically developed addressed-based sampling methodology using the latest Delivery Sequence File of the USPS – a database with full coverage of all delivery points in the US. Households invited to join the panel are randomly selected from all available households in the U.S. Persons in the sampled households are invited to join and participate in the panel. Those selected who do not already have internet access are provided a tablet and internet connection at no cost to the panel member. Those who join the panel and who are selected to participate in a survey are sent a unique password-protected log-in used to complete surveys online. As a result of our recruitment and sampling methodologies, samples from KnowledgePanel cover all households regardless of their phone or internet status and findings can be reported with a margin of sampling error and projected to the general population. KnowledgePanel members receive a per survey incentive, usually the equivalent of $1 (though for some it is $2) in points, that can be redeemed for cash or prizes. No prenotification email was sent prior to field. Panelists receive a unique login to the survey and are only able to complete it one time. Two email reminders were sent to hard-to-reach respondents. Hard-to-reach is defined as 18-29 years old or non-Whites, less than high school or did not vote in the 2020 presidential election.  The remainder of the sample received one reminder email.

The study was conducted in both English and Spanish. The data were weighted to adjust for gender by age, race/ethnicity, education, Census region by metropolitan status, household income, language dominance, 2020 presidential vote choice, and party identification. The demographic benchmarks came from 2024 March Supplement of the Current Population Survey (CPS) from the US Census Bureau. Language dominance benchmarks are from the 2022 American Community Survey (ACS). The 2020 presidential vote choice benchmarks came from the federal elections 2020 election results for the U.S. President while the Party Identification came from the 2024 National Public Opinion Reference Survey (NPORS). The weighting categories were as follows:

  • Gender (Male, Female) by Age (18–29, 30–44, 45–59, and 60+)
  • Race/Hispanic Ethnicity (White Non-Hispanic, Black Non-Hispanic, Other or 2+ Races Non-Hispanic, Hispanic)
  • Education (No high school diploma or GED, High school graduate (high school diploma or the equivalent GED), Some college or Associate’s degree, Bachelor’s degree, Master’s degree or above)
  • Census Region (Northeast, Midwest, South, West) by Metropolitan status (Metro, non-Metro)
  • Household Income (Under $25,000, $25,000-$49,999, $50,000-$74,999, $75,000-$99,999, $100,000-$149,999, $150,000+)
  • Language Dominance (English dominant, Bilingual, Spanish dominant, non-Hispanic)
  • 2020 Presidential Vote Choice (Biden, Trump, Another candidate, Not asked)
  • Party Identification (Republican, Lean Republican, Independent/Not lean, Lean Democrat, Democrat).

The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2.0 percentage points at the 95% confidence level, for results based on the entire sample of adults. The margin of sampling error takes into account the design effect, which was 1.13. The margin of sampling error is higher and varies for results based on sub-samples. Sampling error is only one potential source of error. There may be other unmeasured non-sampling error in this or any poll. In our reporting of the findings, percentage points are rounded off to the nearest whole number. As a result, percentages in a given table column may total slightly higher or lower than 100%. In questions that permit multiple responses, columns may total substantially more than 100%, depending on the number of different responses offered by each respondent.

For more information on this news release, please contact:

Chris Jackson
Senior Vice President, US
Public Affairs
+1 202 420-2025
[email protected]

Mallory Newall
Vice President, US
Public Affairs
+1 202 374-2613
[email protected]

About Ipsos

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The author(s)
  • Chris Jackson Senior Vice President, US, Public Affairs
  • Mallory Newall Vice President, US, Public Affairs
  • Sarah Feldman Editorial Director, US, Public Affairs
  • Charlie Rollason Senior Research Manager, US, Public Affairs
  • Johnny Sawyer Senior Research Manager, US, Public Affairs

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