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Poll Shows Clinton Leading in 3 Battleground States

The results of the latest Marquette University Law School poll are in.

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The Marquette Law School Poll was conducted August 4 through Sunday, sampling 805 registered Wisconsin voters.

Multiple polls released last week showed Clinton expanding her lead over Trump, the GOP’s presidential nominee. As Trump upbraided Clinton for having Mateen in the stands behind her, Foley smiled, applauded and even waved at Trump.

The poll found that Hillary Clinton is also leading Donald Trump 52 percent to 37 percent among likely voters with 10 percent supporting neither.

Our digital coverage of Decision 2016 is presented by Rosen Nissan /Kia. Trump sharply criticized the news media for the way it handled a comment he made in Wilmington, North Carolina, on Tuesday suggesting gun rights supporters could take action against Clinton.

The poll is the first in Wisconsin since Trump and Clinton accepted their respective parties’ nominations at the Republican and Democratic national conventions last month.

Richard Curtin, director of the MI survey, noted that households who expected Hillary Clinton to become the next president had a significantly more upbeat view on how the USA economy would do going forward. Ron Johnson, 53% to 42%, among likely voters.

Among all registered voters, some 44 percent want Trump to drop out.

A relatively high percentage of respondents continue to not have an opinion about Johnson, a first-term incumbent, 31 percent compared with 18 percent who don’t know enough about Feingold, who served three terms in the Senate before Johnson defeated him in 2010.

“His policies don’t seem to be well formed, they don’t seem to make any sense”, Smith said.

Meanwhile, in Iowa, another battleground state, Clinton leads Trump by four points, 41 percent to 37 percent.

For registered voters in the July poll, Feingold received 45 percent, Johnson 38 percent and Anderson 8 percent.

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A longtime Republican presidential campaign advance staffer described the seating area behind the candidate to ABC News as a “tapestry” – a backdrop of people often chosen by the campaign to reflect wide-ranging support for the candidate.

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