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Trump Leads Clinton By 3 Points in North Carolina

Both parties have held a lead in the polls in recent months.

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The survey found that Trump leads Clinton 41 percent to 37 percent among likely OH voters.

The PPP survey finds Trump with 44 percent of the vote to 43 percent for Clinton with Gary Johnson getting 5 percent and Jill Stein and Evan McMullin each at 1 percent. When third-party candidates are added into the mix, Clinton and Trump are still tied, this time at 43 percent.

This Quinnipiac poll, however, is very different from a new Suffolk University poll that has Trump up three points among North Carolinians.

College graduates are more likely to support Clinton, while those who do not have degrees lean towards Trump.

Clinton and Trump are also in a virtual tie in OH while Clinton holds small leads in North Carolina and Pennsylvania, according to Quinnipiac surveys released Thursday.

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Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton used poor polling numbers as a fundraising point in the campaign’s latest fundraising email sent to supporters Wednesday. “They have Trump up two among likely voters but this poll assumes a lot of things”.

A major opinion poll of thousands of voters in all the 50 American states showed Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clintonwith leads in key states enough to claim victory in the November 8 elections.

Oddly, on Trump’s signature issue – immigration – Clinton squeaks past the GOP candidate by two points: 49-47.

The Republican nominee also leads by four points or more in 20 states, but these are less populated and yield just 126 electoral voters. A CNN/ORC poll this week found Trump near even with Clinton among likely voters nationwide. Far fewer say the focus of U.S. immigration policy should be on deporting immigrants living in the USA illegally, just 11 percent rate that as a top priority.

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Gov. Mike Pence is in Missouri Tuesday, and Hillary Clinton will be here Thursday, but the presidential race in the state isn’t close – at least according to a new poll. A total of 47 percent said they would “strongly” or “somewhat” consider voting for Clinton, 46 percent for Trump, 21 percent for Johnson, and 12 percent for Stein. Sixteen percent support Johnson and 6 percent support Stein. Results have a margin of error of plus or minus 1 percentage point.

Poll Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump in Four Tight Battleground Races