Majority will accept result of US election, even if they dislike the winner: Poll

US President Donald Trump arrives at a campaign rally at Pickaway Agriculture and Event Centre in Circleville, Ohio on Oct 24, 2020. PHOTO: AFP

WASHINGTON (REUTERS) - As the 2020 presidential election enters its final week, a majority of Americans appear ready to accept the result of an exhausting campaign even if their preferred candidate loses, a Reuters/Ipsos poll found.

Its latest survey, conducted from Oct 13-20, shows that 79 per cent of all Americans, including 59 per cent of those who want to re-elect President Donald Trump, will accept a win by Democratic challenger Joe Biden even if they may not support a Biden presidency.

Among those Mr Trump supporters who said they would not accept a Biden victory, 16 per cent said they would do something to challenge a Democratic win such as protesting in public or resorting to violence.

The poll also found that 73 per cent of Americans, including 57 per cent of Biden supporters, would similarly accept a Trump victory. Among those who said they would not accept a Trump win, 22 per cent said they would take action to challenge the result.

US election officials are dealing with a series of challenges this year that have raised concerns about the public's confidence in the result.

Top national security officials warned last week that Russia and Iran have been hacking into US voting systems and looking for ways to undermine the election.

Mr Trump also has repeatedly questioned the integrity of US elections, arguing that the process is "rigged" against him and repeatedly asserting without evidence that the surge in mail-in voting this year will increase the likelihood of voter fraud.

He has refused to commit to a peaceful transfer of power if the vote count indicates he has lost.

So far, at least, a majority of the US public appears ready to accept the result.

Dr Donald Green, a political scientist at Columbia University, said the poll results ease his concerns about post-election violence.

But he warned that if the election is close, or one candidate can make a credible accusation of voter fraud, it could spark wider discontent and protests than the poll suggests.

"This is why many people who oppose Trump are holding their breath and hoping for a lopsided outcome that is not up for grabs," Dr Green said.

The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll shows Mr Biden leads Mr Trump by eight percentage points nationally: 51 per cent of likely voters say they are backing the Democratic challenger while 43 per cent are voting for Mr Trump.

Mr Biden also is ahead in Wisconsin and Michigan, but the race appears to be much closer in other battleground states including Pennsylvania, Florida, Arizona and North Carolina.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll was conducted online, in English, throughout the United States. It gathered responses from 2,649 American adults, including 1,039 who said they had voted for Mr Trump or were planning to vote for him, and 1,153 who said they were similarly backing Mr Biden.

The poll has a credibility interval, a measure of precision, of four percentage points.

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