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Clinton appeals to Nevada Latinos in emotional ad
She leads by 10 percentage points or more in Alabama (59 percent to 31 percent), Arkansas (57-32), Georgia (60-26), Louisiana (60-29), MI (50-40), MS (60-26), Tennessee (58-32), Texas (57-34) and Virginia (56-34), while leading in one closer race in Oklahoma (46-44) and losing in one in MA (42-49).
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As the preferred candidate of the union bosses, Clinton may be better positioned than Sanders to get supporters to show up at caucuses (Nevada isn’t a primary state). But, according to recent Reuters/Ipsos polling, the gap is smaller among young blacks 18 to 29 years old, with 46 percent support Clinton versus 33 percent for Sanders.
The Republican results marked a nominal gain for Trump since his win in the February 9 New Hampshire primary, when he led Cruz by 18.4 points in the national rolling survey, although the increase remained within the poll’s credibility interval.
“The Culinary Union still has not endorsed anyone in this race and they’re arguably the most powerful union in Nevada”, said Mark Peplowski, professor of political science at the College of Southern Nevada. But in the final days before Saturday’s caucuses, Cl…
A new CNN/ORC poll shows the two Democrats virtually tied in Nevada, with white and nonwhite voters evenly split between the two candidates. Ted Cruz, with Trump at 35 percent, Cruz at 20 percent, Sen.
Quinnipiac said it the didn’t measure Bloomberg’s impact with Hillary Clinton as the Democratic candidate because of reports that he would not enter the race if she beat Sanders. Now, they find themselves also downplaying expectations in Nevada, a state where minorities make up almost half of the population. The gap between the two candidates among women has therefore almost halved, shrinking from 10 points to 6 points.
According to a new survey from Consumer Marketing and Insights, the LGBT community prefers Hillary Clinton over Bernie Sanders, albeit by a small enough margin. On primary day, Clinton’s support among black voters dropped drastically to 19 percent compared to Obama’s overwhelming 78 percent, proving that anything can happen.
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The Reuters/Ipsos poll also showed that either Clinton or Sanders would win a hypothetical general election contest with Trump.