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Trump, Clinton head into 2016 with big leads
“He is becoming ISIL’s best recruiter”, Clinton said during the debate hosted by ABC News.
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But that finding, based on interviewing 1,140 voters last week, also found that Sanders would lose by a few percentage points-just outside the poll’s margin of error-if he faced Sen.
The Sanders campaign focuses heavily on economic issues, and the new poll suggests he has boosted his standing on that issue.
A day later, Pierson said Clinton is the bully.
Clinton holds an even wider lead when it comes to the candidate who is best able to handle foreign policy, topping Sanders 72 percent to 15 percent.
She then took a shot at Donald Trump.
Now, after spending weeks largely out of the spotlight nationally, Clinton plans to intensify her campaign schedule from an nearly incumbent-style public effort to a more aggressive approach. Among registered Democrats, 74% have a positive take, up from 62% in October.
It looks like the presidential race is becoming even more contentious as we head into the election year.
Mrs Clinton did not address Mr Trump’s comments directly, but when asked at a campaign rally what she would do about bullying, she used the opportunity to launch a not-so-veiled attack on him. In August, The Washington Post reported that Clinton called Trump before he announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination, encouraging the brash billionaire to “to play a larger role in the Republican Party”.
Clinton leads Sanders on many issues. Smaller majorities say the same about Sanders, with the smallest gap coming on shared values (62 percent experience, 63 percent proud, 67 percent values).
Trump has attempted to argue that his use of a term earlier this week referencing male genitalia to describe Clinton’s 2008 primary loss to President Barack Obama is an accepted political term. On values, Sanders tops the field with 43% of voters saying the Democratic socialist shares their values, narrowly topping Clinton (42%) and Rubio (42%).
On Tuesday, Clinton’s allies continued to join the fray: Emily’s List, which raises money for female candidates who support abortion rights, released an open letter calling on other Republican candidates to denounce Trump’s remarks.
Mrs. Clinton has been stepping up her attacks on Donald Trump as she approaches a general election in which she appears to be confident she will be the party’s standard-bearer. Ted Cruz of Texas, said she saw advantages in Clinton’s failure to back up her assertion about militants using Trump’s comments as a recruitment tool. Trump briefly went after Sanders, but is back to Clinton-bashing as are most of his rivals.
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The poll was conducted December 17-21 and surveyed 1,018 adults via telephone.