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Trump and Clinton deadlocked in North Carolina
In additional questions, respondents expressed concern about Trump’s words and actions on the campaign trail, with 69 percent of those surveyed reporting that they have reservations about aspects of his campaign, with 54 percent saying they have “major” concerns. Trump led with white voters, 65%-35%.
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The highest earners in the USA appear to be swinging towards a vote for Hillary Clinton in the upcoming presidential election, bringing to an end a long-running tendency for top-earners to vote Republican.
Trump, the Republican presidential nominee, claims 44 percent support among the state’s likely voters, while Clinton, the Democratic nominee, gets 43 percent.
Clinton had less of a lead, however, in Wisconsin, a state that has voted Democratic in every presidential election since 1984. However, Clinton appears to a more specific stance on marijuana than Trump, and doesn’t view it with much stigmatization.
At a rally later Tuesday, in Kenansville, North Carolina, Trump predictfed Clinton will copy his language and policy on national security at next week’s debate.
Clinton said her health is fine after taking three days off from campaigning last week to recover from what her doctor said was a mild case of pneumonia.
The news was just as surprising in Wisconsin, where Trump has pulled within 3 points, 41-38 percent, in a Marquette University poll. That number is just 1 point higher (32%) than the number of Hillary Clinton supporters who are voting for her because “she is not Trump”. Clinton had been leading in the Tar Heel State by less than one percentage point.
Clinton had a massive lead with African-American voters in the state, 98%-2%.
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NBC’s Lester Holt, who will moderate the debate on Monday, is registered as a Republican, according to voter information on the New York State Board of Elections website. It comwes amid a series of other polls that have shown Trump variously deadlocked or witin a few points of Clinton.