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Hillary Clinton, the candidate we know so well _ and don’t

Former Representative Michele Bachmann believes Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump is God’s instrument to beat Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton to save the U.S.

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“We think it’s important.that political and civic leaders take seriously the voices of the Millennials”.

Both surveys found that most voters – regardless of how they might choose – had unfavorable impressions of both Clinton and Trump with the GOP candidate generating more negative views than the Democrat. That was up slightly from Clinton’s favorable ratings: 34% of respondents said they viewed the former secretary of state positively, compared to 56% who said they viewed her negatively. “They will be responsible for creating the future of politics”.

Trump is viewed favorably by 29 percent and unfavorably by 65 percent. After initially attacking Clinton using many of Comey’s exact words, Trump later drew controversy to himself by appearing to praise Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein at a campaign stop that same day.

Trump leads Clinton 46 percent to 36 percent, a margin identical to Mitt Romney’s over President Obama’s in 2012 (54 percent to 44 percent). This year’s states are mostly correlated with 2012, so there’s no realignment.

“In saying that it was “possible” that hostile foreign governments had gained access to Mrs. Clinton’s personal account, Mr. Comey noted that she used her mobile device extensively while traveling outside the United States, including trips “in the territory of sophisticated adversaries”.

One poll of likely Virginia voters released Friday found that both candidates were supported by 39 percent of those surveyed, while 22 percent either didn’t know or refused to say.

Johnson supporters were the least enthusiastic, with just 40 percent describing themselves as “very” or “somewhat” enthusiastic, while the remaining 60 percent were either “not very enthusiastic” or “not at all enthusiastic”.

The poll also suggests that Trump still faces difficulty unifying the Republican Party after the contentious primary campaign, as he gets no more than 79% of the Republican vote in all four swing states polled. The three states are critical in the November election.

Some 55 percent thought Clinton would be better for Muslims, while just 9 percent thought Trump would be. Clinton, by contrast, dominates among minorities, leading 77% to 3% among blacks and 51% to 30% among Latinos. About one-third of voters (37 percent) said health care is extremely important to them, making the issue’s importance similar to that of gun control, the economy and jobs, and education.

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The Democratic convention will begin on July 25, in Philadelphia, with Clinton poised to become the first woman nominated for president by one of the two major parties.

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