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Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by five points in Florida

“She has opened up a five-point lead in the latest poll from the Sunshine State and she also has 50-45 lead in the latest national poll”.

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Trump started August in a big polling hole against Clinton and clawed back to almost a dead heat, even spending much less than Clinton. Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson maintained his third position with 9 percent and Green Party nominee Jill Stein trailed with 3 percent.

There is less sureness about Trump’s debate abilities from Trump supporters than there is about Clinton among her voters.

Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has called for harsh treatment of “enemy combatants” and said the 28-year-old NY bombing suspect might be provided with “room service” in his hospital bed and “an outstanding lawyer”.

The Trump Campaign alleged that Clinton Foundation is first and foremost an arm of the Clintons’ political and buck-raking apparatus. “Ronald Reagan was not expected to carry NY”.

The race between Clinton and Trump represents a battle between two of the least liked major party candidates in history, and Pew’s findings are hardly the first to show that voters are largely disappointed with both. Clinton is up, 47-38 percent. (A June poll from Quinnipiac had the two even in the suburbs as well).

Bell said because he no longer lives in the Windy City and is no longer a Bears fan, he doesn’t care about the city’s professional sports teams.

In yet another showing of how peculiar this presidential race has been, Hillary Clinton has gained the support of a demographic that nearly always votes Republican. There was a similar margin of New Yorkers who believed “climate change is a significant threat to our planet”.

Trump is viewed unfavorably by almost 70% of New Yorkers.

All 213 seats in the state Legislature on the ballot in November, too. “Overall, 68% of all registered voters ranked their interest that high”.

That’s not as strong a result as Trump has been seeing in some recent polls but it is an improvement over last month. Bloomberg’s poll shows that referring to those in his path as “pigs”, “slobs”, and “bimbos” hasn’t played well with the wealthier segment of the population; 59 percent said they’re bothered a lot by his sexist rhetoric.

Only 10% of them have a favorable opinion of Clinton, to 75% with an unfavorable view.

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The poll was conducted September 16-19 for NBC News/Wall Street Journal by Democratic pollster Fred Yang of Hart Research Associates, and Republican pollster Bill McInturff of Public Opinion Strategies. That, combined with the poll’s 4% margin of error, still means the race could go either way, but it’s a big departure from the norm.

The Latest: Trump says he won't be treated fairly at debate