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Poll shows Clinton, Rubio leading in Florida

The former secretary of state’s own relationship with the press can be tenuous at times. Johnson had 10% and Stein had 5%.

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In Philadelphia, Clinton is outpacing the Democratic Party’s 7-1 voter-registration advantage over Republicans, leading Trump 83 percent to 7 percent. The poll found that 62% of those who watched the DNC said they were more likely to vote for Clinton.

She listed off other African-American staff who have worked with her – and for her – and said she’s had a “lifetime of friendship” with black people.

Donald Trump and polls have had a long and unusually good relationship.

But this poll is slightly more recent than those late July polls, and it’s consistent with the national polling trend that shows Trump falling apart before our very eyes.

Madonna is the director of the Franklin and Marshall College Poll. It has a margin of error of 4.4 percent. Numerous national and key battleground state polls released this week indicate Trump trailing the Democratic nominee by the high single digits or low double digits.

Clinton is ahead of Trump by 9 points, 41% to 32%, among likely MI voters, according to a Detroit news/WDIV-TV poll.

But after months of hounding from her political opponents and the traveling press core, Clinton finally took several questions Friday. We don’t want big money Republicans to come into the Democratic Party and try to pull our candidate further to the right. Donald Trump comes in dead last. If they have another option on the ballot, as they will this year, a chunk of those votes move to Johnson and Stein.

The F&M poll may also reflect damage from Trump’s extended confrontation with the parents of a Muslim Army captain who was killed in Iraq, said pollster G. Terry Madonna.

The McClatchy-Marist survey reached 983 registered voters between August 1-3 and was statistically significant within 3.1 percent.

That’s up from 4 points in May. She leads 43% to 39% when third-party candidates are included.

In the NBC/WSJ national poll, both candidates have high negative ratings, but there has been a shift in that statistic since the end of the conventions, reports The Wall Street Journal.

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Without winning states like New Hampshire and Pennsylvania, Trump could almost sweep the remaining swing states and still lose to Clinton. Among those surveyed, 41 percent viewed the Democrat favorably, compared to 30 percent for Trump. “I’m here to tell you Donald, you’re wrong”, said Clinton.

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