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Rasmussen poll: Trump leads Clinton nationally

Since her tenure as Secretary of State, surveys have collected information on how Americans view Clinton, but a recent poll reveals that she is now the least popular she has ever been – at least since polling began.

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In a two-way race without Johnson and Stein, Fox finds Clinton’s lead extends to six points, 48% to 42%.

Democrats are going on offense in three red states, while Hillary Clinton is raising huge sums of money for Democratic Party organizations.

Trump has 40 percent in the poll, edging out Clinton’s 39 percent.

The AP first asked for all Clinton’s calendars in 2010 and again in 2013 under the U.S. Freedom of Information Act, but the State Department did not release them.

Donald Trump has gained ground on Hillary Clinton for the US presidency in the race for Pennsylvania, according to the latest Franklin & Marshall College Poll.

The MetroNews West Virginia Poll of likely West Virginia voters, conducted last month by Repass Research of Cincinnati, gives Trump a 49 percent to 31 percent lead over Democrat Hillary Clinton. Her previous high for unfavorable views was in June, when 55 percent disliked Clinton. A third, 33%, say they plan to vote a straight GOP ticket up and down the ballot, and another 20% say they are “not very likely” to vote for Democratic candidates for other offices. Trump is maintaining leads in less populated and more rural areas such as the northeast (42/35 percent), the northwest (64/24 percent) and central Pennsylvania (50/31 percent). Among Trump supporters, 83 percent said they’d describe Hillary Clinton as evil, and 66 percent of Clinton voters would describe Trump in that way. The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 4 percentage points for registered voters.

The Kaiser foundation poll was conducted from August 18-24 among a nationally representative random digit dial telephone sample of adults that included 1,020 registered voters.

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“Backlash against Trump’s divisive rhetoric and risky campaign, including his embrace of a deportation force and the alt-right hate movement, have increased the opportunities in the state”, the official said.

Clinton Aug 31