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Hillary Clinton would thump Trump if election were held today, poll finds
Two other polls this month, from Public Policy Polling and Quinnipiac University, said that Trump was leading Cruz, but only by a small margin.
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The first-term senator from Texas captured 40 percent in a CBS News/You Gov poll, released Sunday. In each state, Trump, Cruz and Carson – the candidates who’ve most laid claim to the “outsider” mantle, and who have a combined total of years’ experience in elected office – together receive a solid majority of the vote.
Rubio, meanwhile, fared best among the candidates surveyed in the poll.
Marco Rubio (R-FL) is a distant third, with 12 percent support. They surveyed 508 Republicans with a margin of error of +/- 4.4 percentage points and 462 Democrats with a margin of error of +/- 4.6 percentage points. Cruz follows with 24 percent.
Cruz found a bit more support among downstate conservatives, pulling in 18 percent to Trump’s 29 percent. We expect to see him here after the holidays.
GOP presidential hopeful Jeb Bush may not be doing well in the polls, but outside interests are banking more than 100 million on his bid, much more than any other candidate in the race on both sides of the aisle. “Trump is not the pick of the political pundits, and people intuitively get that”. He addressed the crowd for about 75 minutes, talking about a wide range of topics that would frequently split into tangents about specific media entities and stories from his business deals.
“She’s bad”, Trump said Monday night.
He won the backing of a key evangelical coalition after a secret December 7 meeting in which top national activists agreed to roll out a stream of endorsements, many timed for maximum impact between now and March 1, Super Tuesday, when a dozen states will hold primaries or caucuses. “So that’s why I think he’s gaining momentum”. Bernie Sanders for the 2016 Democratic presidential nomination.
That’s made the state fertile ground for center-right candidates like Sen. And also in New Hampshire as in Iowa, his supporters call themselves firmly decided, with a plurality of 47 percent saying so, well above the overall number of 32 percent across all voters.
But The New York Times’ Jonathan Martin says it is unlikely that any of the campaigns or super PACs would start a flight of real negative ads this week.
“Hillary Clinton tops [Trump]”.
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The New Hampshire results – with establishmentarians Rubio, Christie, Kasich and Bush all clustered in the mid-single digits to low teens – underscore the traditional GOP disunity. With big leads in national polling, Trump may look like the presumptive Republican nominee, but these lingering questions give many observers pause. Then, impersonating Clinton’s voice, he continued, “Donald Trump is on video, and ISIS is using him on the video to recruit”.