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Clinton may have the popular vote, but Trump’s leading in swing states
Last month, Clinton was the one with the slim lead among Pennsylvania voters, 42 percent to 41 percent.
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In Florida, Trump has support of 42 per cent, while Clinton is favored by 39 per cent.
Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump each register with 41 percent in the survey released Wednesday.
State averages compiled byRealClearPolitics differ from the Quinnipiac poll, with Clinton up by a little more than 1 percent in Pennsylvania and OH and tied with Trump in Florida. But the tight race marks a major swing from a previous June 21 survey, when Clinton led 47 percent to 39 percent.
Voterss in Florida believe Clinton is more intelligent than Trump (52-35 percent), but they trust the mogul more: 50 percent find him more trustworthy and honest than Clinton, whereas only 37 percent believe she has those traits.
Results in all three states, however, were within the polls’ margin-of-error of 3.1 percentage points.
Clinton lost ground on honesty and moral standards in the poll that showed tight races in Florida, Pennsylvania and OH, all swing states that could go to either party in November’s presidential election. But he said Clinton lost ground to Trump on questions that measure moral standards and honesty.
Hillary Clinton may not face criminal charges after the FBI concluded its investigation into her use of a private email sever during her tenure as secretary of state, but that doesn’t mean there aren’t repercussions. The Pennsylvania survey shows Trump at 40 percent to Clinton’s 34 percent, with Johnson at 9 percent and Stein at 3.
Connecticut-based Quinnipiac regularly gauges the opinions of voters on candidates and issues in OH and other swing states. Republicans back Trump 82-6 percent, while Clinton leads 87-4 among Democrats.
“We know the battlegrounds are going to be close til the end”, Clinton Press Secretary Brian Fallon tweeted on Wednesday.
Specifically, Clinton will contrast her call for unity with presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s rhetoric, arguing that he is transforming the GOP from the party of Lincoln into the party of Trump, according to the campaign official.
“What I say is it is absolutely imperative for the future of this country that Donald Trump not be elected President of the United States”, Sanders responded.
“There is no doubt in my mind that, as we head into November, Hillary Clinton is far and away the best candidate”, he said.
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But the biggest determiner of who the voters will go for is defined by race.