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Presidential race too close to call in Iowa, poll shows
Donald Trump called Hillary Clinton a bigot in a speech Tuesday night and accused his Democratic rival for the presidency of pandering to “communities of color”.
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Her remarks came shortly after Mr Trump, struggling to steady his troubled campaign, announced a new chief executive officer and campaign manager.
The Democratic presidential nominee told a rally attended by more than 2,300 people in Cleveland: “Donald Trump doesn’t need a tax cut”.
Despite his outreach to African-Americans and people of color, a recent NBC/Wall Street Journal poll showed that Trump has only one percent of the African-American vote.
Romney says: “Either he’s not anywhere near as wealthy as he says he is (or) there’s a bombshell in Donald Trump’s taxes”. “It is time for our society to address some honest and very hard truths”, Trump said at an election rally in Wisconsin.
Additionally in the Fox News Latino poll, 69% of Latino voters believe the country’s current immigration system is “mostly broken”, while 26% believe it’s “mostly working”.
Trump, she said, has “shown us who he is”.
Libertarian Gary Johnson has 7 percent support among voters polled, and Green Party candidate Jill Stein has 4 percent.
The number of likely voters who picked neither Clinton nor Trump in the poll was almost 24 percent. In his speech, Trump also accused Clinton of setting herself “against the police”.
Democrat Deborah Ross led Republican incumbent Richard Burr among registered voters 46 to 44 percent, but among those who say they will definitely vote in this year’s election, Burr was ahead 47 percent to 45 percent.
Taxes are emerging as the biggest difference between the two candidates, at least when it comes to economic policy.
Midwestern, industrial states like OH are critical to Mr. Trump’s strategy of reaching the 270 electoral votes needed to win the White House. They have formed a coalition with Republicans I the past, and have not promised that they’d necessarily rejoin with the other Democrats after elections.
Hillary Clinton lost to Bernie Sanders in the May primary and has done little campaigning here.
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The Republican nominee adds that Clinton does not take responsibility for her previous transgressions – the 1994 crime bill responsible for mass incarceration.