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GfK Poll: Who Americans trust more to handle top issues
Another 8% said they don’t know who they’ll vote for, while 7% said they won’t vote and 4% said they’d vote for somebody else.
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“I can’t stand Trump, but unfortunately I’m going to be forced to vote for him because I can’t stand Hillary more”, said Doug Lemley, a 46-year-old network engineer from East Lampeter Township.
If Hillary Clinton won, I’d probably consider suicide.
“She was very clear about infrastructure and education in schools, dealing with student debt, having a strong country so we can be a strong foreign player”, said Helen Manich, an Alexandria resident.
“Heading into the two parties’ conventions, the race for President is a dead heat”, CBS News reported.
Trump is leading Clinton by 42 per cent to 39 per cent in Florida, although last month the former secretary of state had been eight percentage points out in front of the real estate magnate, EFE news agency reported. Now President Obama has returned early from a trip overseas and is scheduled to join his predecessor, George W. Bush, on Tuesday at an interfaith memorial in Dallas for five police officers who were shot to death last week during a protest of the killings of unarmed black men in Louisiana and Minnesota.
Voters have strongly negative impressions of both candidates. We would’ve walked to the end of the earth to see “our” envisioned future become reality, but I will NEVER NEVER NEVER vote for Hillary.
“And you can tell them to go f*** themselves”, he says in another. “It’s a choice between hot and hell”, said Annette Scott, 70, of Monmouth County, New Jersey.
Another poll out Thursday, by AP-GfK, showed that a whopping 81% of Americans were afraid of at least one of the two major candidates winning the White House.
As Clinton exited the meeting, she did not respond to questions about Indiana Gov. Mike Pence, who is rumored to be Donald Trump’s preferred running mate. Only 27 percent of Americans would be proud of that choice, and 26 percent would be excited at her election. “When kids are scared by political candidates and policy debates, it’s a sign something has gone badly wrong”, Clinton said.
The Republican-controlled legislative branch is continuing investigations of Clinton despite Comey’s decision to not recommend prosecution for her handling of emails containing sensitive information, with some members believing she endangered national security. That focus on individuals, not likely voters, downplays Trump’s likely ballot-box support because the GOP typically has higher support among registered voters than among all individuals.
Clinton pledged that if she’s elected president a pathway to citizenship would be part of the immigration reform package she would present to Congress in her first 100 days in office.
“On the economy, do you want a “you’re fired” president or a “you’re hired” president?”
“He’s a safe pick, who gets more interesting the more you learn about him”, one Democrat close to Clinton said.
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“I definitely think she’ll support women and minorities a lot better than Trump would”.