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Bomb Blame Game: Presidential Candidates Spar Over Recent Terror Attacks
Trump also got into a little pre-debate hazing of Clinton, writing on Twitter: “Hillary Clinton is taking the day off again, she needs the rest”.
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In the speech that Donald Trump gave on immigration in Phoenix, Arizona, on August 31st, he laid out “the darkest vision of the American experience that any major party nominee has ever given”, according to an editorial in the New York Times, by columnist Timothy Egan. That lead now sits at just 1.9 points.
The campaign’s reasoning is as follows: Clinton is almost certain to win 191 electoral votes from 16 Democratic states and Washington, D.C., Mook said.
Yet national polls peg the race as significantly closer. Earlier in the summer, 73 percent thought of him negatively.
Clinton turned her attention directly to younger voters yesterday, with a speech in Philadelphia and a new op-ed at mic.com on “what millennials have taught me”.
In a tight contest, those are important numbers. And the unsuitability of the other person will likely continue to be the focus of each campaign.
Clinton has launched numerous attacks on Trump’s rhetoric and scandals, but the poll shows none have stuck to Trump the way the email story has stuck to Clinton. ME is one of two states that awards electoral college votes by congressional district, and the overall victor of the state gets an additional two votes.
The Trump campaign has a new video out this week featuring Ted Nugent, who’s had a few controversial things to say in recent years. There’s pain there, and in Trump a hope that they can “take it back” to how it – and they – used to be.
In North Carolina, Trump pulled ahead by one percentage point.
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In fact, the state Senate has scored its highest approval rating in the history of the poll, at 48 percent, with the Assembly at 44 percent. But when asked if they had to choose between Clinton, Trump and Johnson, 35% chose Clinton, compared to 18% for Trump and Johnson each. But leave it to Trump to buck a decades-old trend. But the danger for Clinton is that states tend to move together – if she is losing Florida and North Carolina on November 8, she is unlikely to be pulling ahead in other swing states. Through August, she blanketed 11 states with 35,714 broadcast television commercials to Trump’s 7,457 in five states, according to Kantar Media’s political ad data. Both candidates moved swiftly to capitalize on investigations into a weekend of violent attacks – bombings in NY and New Jersey and stabbings at a Minnesota mall – casting themselves as most qualified to combat terrorism at home and overseas.