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Pennsylvania: Will Trump or Clinton win in the swing state? Latest polls
She supports a strong vetting program. “She calls patriotic Americans who support our campaign, many of them cops and soldiers, deplorable and irredeemable, and she means it. Millions and millions of people”. This helps explain why he changed his position on whether President Obama was born in the US.
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Clinton has also lost some support among women voters, though she’s still ahead with women by 22 points. Asked which candidate would better handle the jobs and economy, Clinton ekes out a razor-thin lead over Trump (49 to 47 percent).
North Carolinians – at 87 percent – said that it was not a factor in their voting decision that Clinton would be the first female president in the United States.
Just over half of those contacted by Roanoke said Trump’s proposal to build a wall along the U.S-Mexico border was a bad idea while 43 percent liked the plan.
There are 46 days to go until the USA presidential election and the race is still tighter than anyone imagined it would be.
Almost 80 percent of Latinos have a negative view of Donald Trump, and fewer than one in five say that they plan to support him in November’s election, a new NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Telemundo poll shows.
The results of aNew York Times poll released last Thursday indicate that Donald Trump ties or trails Hillary Clinton on questions of national security and foreign policy.
In a head-to-head race between Clinton and Trump, the poll finds that the Democrat leads by 7 points, 48 percent to 41 percent.
Polling by Morning Consult suggests that Clinton’s health issues may be a problem for her. It was that drubbing that persuaded some Republican leaders that their party needed to do more to reach out to Hispanic voters.
Donald Trump is back in North Carolina’s voter-rich Piedmont Tuesday, but he’s also making a stop where presidential candidates aren’t normally seen in the rural East. But this assumes he can hold on to the other swing states in which he leads.
While Nevada has been a toss-up state for months, Colorado and OH have been trending toward Trump.
Both of these candidates are known quantities with extraordinary fame, who have been in public life for decades.
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In last month’s version of the same poll, Clinton led the head-to-head matchup by 16 points.