President Trump kicked off his two-day sprint campaign with 10 rallies in battlefield states as Biden took the lead in numerous surveys.

Donald Trump's sprint campaign kicked off Nov. 1, two days before Election Day, when the US President was judged to be facing a narrow gap for a second term.

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US President Donald Trump at the election campaign in Montoursville, Pennsylvania, on October 31 Photo: Reuters

Trump will stay in the states believed to be most important, deciding whether to stay in the White House for another four years or become the second incumbent president to fail in a second term, after George H.W.

The results of several surveys show that Democrat Joe Biden has a lead over Trump for the past several months, as the public health crisis caused by Covid-19 continues.

However, the odds of supporting Trump stick to Biden in the battlefield states, enough for the US President to win the 270 necessary electoral votes for victory and continue his second term.

Biden, who put Trump's Covid-19 countermeasure at the heart of his campaign, held a campaign in Pennsylvania on November 1, a state that could decide the winner of the US presidential election.

Trump will hold 10 rallies on November 1-2, making this the busiest time of the campaign.

Trump will hold rallies in Michigan, Iowa, North Carolina, Georgia and Florida on November 1.

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US President Donald Trump at a campaign in Newtown, Pennsylvania, on October 31 Photo: Reuters

The US President will end the sprint campaign with a news rally on the night of November 2 in Grand Rapids, Michigan, where Trump once ended the campaign in 2016. In a surprise victory four years ago, Trump won support at

The growing number of nCoV infections in the United States placed a heavy burden on Trump.

During the October 31 rally in Newtown, Pennsylvania, Trump seemed to lament the close race against Biden, an opponent he considered weak.

Despite Biden taking the lead in a number of national polls, state-by-state polls show a narrower race.

Some Republicans were pessimistic about Trump's chances of winning, saying that it was difficult for the US president to turn things around in many states.

However, Trump and his team of advisers say the polls underestimate the level of support for the Republican party and many people do not want to admit it.