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Sanders overtakes Clinton in New Hampshire
According to the Franklin Pierce University/Boston Herald poll, 80 percent of likely New Hampshire Democrats view Clinton as “favorable“, down from 84 percent in a poll conducted in March of this year.
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Vice President Joe Biden, who is reportedly still considering a run, received 9 percent in the poll.
The latest poll out of the early primary state of New Hampshire shows Democratic presidential hopeful and Vermont Sen.
Though Clinton trails in Tuesday’s poll, national polls still show her very far ahead of the competition, and remains the Democratic frontrunner.
The outspoken GOP candidate did say he would never allow BLM activists to storm his stage, commandeer his microphone, and bully him into the background; and that yes indeed, there might be fighting involved if they tried to hijack a Donald Trump campaign event.
Sanders is one of five major candidates seeking the Democratic presidential nomination.
“More than half of the people who said they supported both Hillary Clinton or Bernie Sanders said they might change their minds”, said Davis. The poll’s margin of error is plus or minus 4.7. Sanders’ favorability went up about 20 points since March and Clinton’s declined four points. Sanders stopped in the Granite State on August 1st, and Clinton campaigned there the 10th and 11th.
A video of two female activists aggressively interrupting Sanders during his recent campaign rally in Seattle has gone viral and drawn criticism from both sides of the aisle.
Clinton has been criticized for her decision to use a personal email server while she was secretary of state, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation has recently begun looking into the possibility that she sent and received classified information on it.
Positioning himself as an uncompromising (and uncompromised) movement candidate, Sanders has now surged in front of Clinton as the top choice of likely Democratic voters in the first-in-the-nation New Hampshire primary.
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Eighteen percent of likely Republican primary voters said they support Trump, followed by former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush at 13 percent and Ohio Gov. John Kasich at 12 percent.