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Clinton campaign says Trump could have “low bar” at debate

Donald TrumpDonald TrumpComplaint filed against Trump Foundation with Florida AG In shift, Trump is critical of police officer Trump on birther announcement: “I wanted to get on with the campaign” MORE has a narrow lead over Hillary ClintonHillary Rodham ClintonIn shift, Trump is critical of police officer Trump on birther announcement: “I wanted to get on with the campaign” Bill Clinton defends his foundation MORE in Nevada, North Carolina and OH, according to a Fox News poll released Wednesday.

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If there’s good news for Trump in this poll it’s the honest and trustworthy numbers where he beats out Clinton 41% to 31 percent.

In North Carolina, Trump has a 5-point lead over his Democratic rival.

In the Granite State, Clinton edged out Trump 47% to 38% among registered voters, according to a Monmouth University poll. Johnson’s at 10 percent and Stein’s at 1 percent.

Trump is up 43-40 in Nevada, 45-40 in North Carolina and 42-37 in Ohio.

According to the poll, 33 percent of Trump supporters said the main reason for supporting the Republican candidate is that “he is not Clinton”, while 32 percent of Democrat Clinton supporters back her because “she is not Trump”.

An NBC/Wall Street Journal poll released Wednesday afternoon found Clinton leading Trump 43 percent to 37 nationally, with Johnson and Stein receiving 9 percent and 3 percent support, respectively.

However, those advantages were eclipsed by Clinton’s leads among women and college-educated voters-both of which are a majority voting bloc in the state, both in the poll sample Wednesday and in past elections.

Legendary Mexican singer Vicente Fernandez is lending his voice to support Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton and potentially drum up Latino voters. The RealClearPolitics average from the state shows Trump ahead by 1.8 points. Consequentially, Clinton saw her poll numbers slide.

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The polls were conducted in the three states, which are widely considered to crucial to a Trump victory, from Sunday until Tuesday evening. The margin of error for all three states is 3.5 percent.

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump were the big winners in the Arizona primary election