Despite Donald Trump's declaration that he "hates" Taylor Swift, Ivanka Trump and her daughter relished a night out at the Eras Tour in Miami.

Ivanka Trump and her daughter Arabella do not have any ill feelings toward Taylor Swift, despite the possibility that her father may have bad blood, OK! Magazine reported.

Donald Trump's daughter, Ivanka, presented her 13-year-old daughter with tickets to the Eras Tour concert in Miami, performed by the 34-year-old megastar.

The pair's night out may surprise Trump's supporters, as her father notoriously expressed his animosity toward the singer in response to her endorsement of his rival, Kamala Harris.

According to PageSix, the ex-first daughter took the youngster and her friends to Hard Rock Stadium over the weekend “to see one of her daughter’s favorite artists.”

The mother-daughter duo has yet to share any snapshots or recordings from their purported attendance at the Eras Tour concert.

Arabella's affection for the musical star has been disclosed previously.

The adolescent, whose birthday falls in July, previously expressed her affection for the Cruel Summer hitmaker by decorating her birthday cake with a Swift-themed design that included the 2014 Blank Space lyric, "Boys only want love if it's torture."

In addition to sharing a photograph of the white cake with her 7.6 million Instagram followers, Ivanka, who shares her daughter with her husband, Jared Kushner, penned, "Best cake for my favorite Swiftie."

On the other hand, Donald does not harbor the same affection for Taylor, 34, as his granddaughter and Ivanka, 42, do.

The 78-year-old Republican presidential candidate used Truth Social last month to express his dissatisfaction with the multi-award-winning artist Taylor Swift after Swift endorsed Democratic nominee Kamala Harris in the upcoming election. He wrote, "I HATE TAYLOR SWIFT."

“I’m voting for @kamalaharris because she fights for the rights and causes I believe need a warrior to champion them,” Taylor captioned an Instagram post featuring her embracing a cat.

“I was so heartened and impressed by her selection of running mate @timwalz, who has been standing up for LGBTQ+ rights, IVF, and a woman’s right to her own body for decades.”

The Fortnight chart-topper also denounced a fabricated AI image of herself endorsing Donald in the same message, which the 45th president had shared over the summer.

Additionally, she appeared to mock J.D. Vance's harshly criticized "lonely cat lady" remarks by concluding her endorsement with the phrase "Taylor Swift. Childless Cat Lady."

Meanwhile, as of just over two weeks before the election, the campaign between former President Donald Trump and Vice President Kamala Harris appears to be deadlocked. This is according to a series of surveys that typically show Harris with a narrow national advantage, although the crucial swing states are essentially deadlocked.

Harris is in the lead by four points, 50% to 46%, in the weekly poll that was issued by Morning Consult on Tuesday. This is in line with the findings of the previous week's poll, but it is a decrease from her lead of 51% to 45% in the two polls that came before the most recent one.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll released on Tuesday also found Harris with a three-point advantage, 46% to 43% (but two points when using rounded figures, which is within the poll's two-point margin of error); a Reuters/Ipsos poll conducted the previous week also found her with a three-point lead, 45% to 42%.

Harris has gained one point, from 45% to 44%, in a poll of likely voters conducted by USA Today and Suffolk University on October 14-18 (with a margin of error of 3.1). This is due to Trump's lowering of the margins of victory since the last poll conducted by these groups in August, which had Harris up by five points.

After posting two-point leads in September and early October and a four-point lead in August, Harris also led Trump by just one point in a poll of likely voters published on Friday by Emerson College. The poll indicated that the margin of victory was 49%- 48%.

After leading Harris by a margin of 50%- 48% in September, Trump recovered the lead over her in a poll conducted by Fox News and released on Wednesday. The poll revealed that Trump had a lead of 50%- 48% among likely voters, which is a change from the 50%- 48% edge that Harris had in September.

She has a five-point advantage (52%-47%) in a Marist College poll of likely voters, an increase from Harris' two-point edge in the closely watched pollster's September survey. Additionally, she has a four-point lead (49%-45%) in an Economist/YouGov poll of likely voters, which is equal to Harris' lead last week. Both of these polls were published on Wednesday.

As a result of several other surveys, margins are narrower: Following a tie between the two candidates in the survey conducted by Harvard CAPS and Harris in September, Trump is trailing Harris by 51% to 49% in a survey of registered voters conducted on October 11-13.

In a new poll of registered voters released by NBC on October 13, Trump and Harris were tied at 48%. However, a poll released by ABC and Ipsos on the same day shows Harris with a two-point advantage among likely voters between 50% and 48%. This is within the margin of error for the ABC poll, which is 2.5 points. This is a shift from the previous month when ABC and NBC showed Harris with a slightly more than a five-point lead.

A third survey released on October 13 by CBS/YouGov revealed that Harris is leading Trump among likely voters by a margin of 51%-48%. This is a somewhat closer advantage than Harris' 52%-48% lead from the previous month, but Harris has a narrower edge in the seven battleground states, which is 50%-49%.

In a poll conducted by Siena and the New York Times and released on October 8, Harris emerged as the front-runner in both organizations' polls for the first time since July.

A Quinnipiac survey issued on September 24 and a CNN/SSRS poll released on September 24 showed that Trump and Harris were tied for president of the United States.

According to the weighted polling average of FiveThirtyEight, Harris has eliminated President Trump's lead over Vice President Joe Biden since she announced her campaign on July 21. However, her advantage has declined significantly over the past two months, reaching its highest point of 3.7 points in late August.

According to the election estimate provided by FiveThirtyEight, Trump is favored to win 53 times out of 100, while Harris is favored to win 47 times out of 100. A political analyst and statistician, NateSilver likewise believes that Trump has a slight advantage. Still, he recently stated that he has "never seen an election in which the forecast spent more time in the vicinity of 50/50."

It is 0.8. According to the most recent polling average from RealClearPolitics, Harris is currently ahead of Trump by that number of points. While this is happening, the average provided by FiveThirtyEight indicates that Harris is leading by 1.8 points, and Nate Silver's Silver Bulletin projection indicates that Harris is leading by 1.6 points.

The polling averages provided by FiveThirtyEight indicate that Harris holds a slight advantage in Michigan, Wisconsin, and Nevada. Still, Trump is stronger in Pennsylvania, Arizona, North Carolina, and Georgia. On the other hand, all seven swing states are within single digits, and the majority of them have margins of less than a percentage point. This indicates that Trump would win the election if the polling at the state level is accurate.

NBC News surveyed on September 29 and showed that although Harris continues to lead Trump among Latinos, the gap between the two candidates is narrowing. According to the results of a poll that was done by NBC News, Telemundo, and CNBC among 1,000 registered Latino voters from September 16th to September 23rd, 54% of respondents backed Harris, while 40% of respondents supported Trump, and 6% of respondents indicated they were undecided who they would vote for. According to NBC, the support for Harris is higher than it was when Biden was running against Trump. However, it is still much lower than the leads that Democratic candidates have had in the past, including a 36-point lead in 2020 polling and a 50-point lead in 2016 polling. The survey had a margin of error of 3.1 percentage points each way.

According to surveys conducted before the debate, the increase in Harris' polling appeared to have reached a plateau. One such survey was conducted by NPR/PBS/Marist on September 3-5, showing Harris leading Trump by 49% to 48%. This is a significant decrease from Harris's three-point advantage in August. According to most post-debate surveys, most respondents believe Harris won the debate; nonetheless, the winning margin did not affect the horserace between the two candidates dramatically.

In a poll of likely voters conducted by Siena and published by the New York Times on September 19, it was discovered that most voters across all demographics gave upbeat assessments of Harris' performance during the debate on September 10. Specifically, 67% of respondents stated that she did well, while only 40% of voters said the same about Trump.

The results of a poll conducted by ABC News and Ipsos a few days after the September 11-13 debate showed that Harris had gained 52%-46% among likely voters and 51%-47% among registered voters. This result was essentially the same as her six-point leads with likely voters in surveys conducted by ABC News and Ipsos in late August and early August. This was the case, although 63% of Americans believed Harris had won the debate.