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Trump leads Clinton in Kansas, but voters hold negative views of both
When minor party candidates are included in the mix, Clinton continues to remain in the lead though Trump does narrow the gap.
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Fewer (35%) say the same about Hillary Clinton.
Overall, pollsters put Florida and North Carolina as much closer races than we see here.
Florida: Clinton 37 percent favorable, 58 percent unfavorable (-21); Trump 34 percent favorable, 61 percent unfavorable (-27).
When asked which of the major party’s presumptive presidential nominees best represents their health care views, more voters choose Hillary Clinton (46%) than Donald Trump (32%), with 15 percent saying “neither”.
Trump is also distrusted by a large number of voters – 62 percent – but that number has stayed constant despite increased scrutiny on his business record and falsehoods in his public statements and Twitter messages.
FBI Director James Comey said last week that Clinton and her staff were “extremely careless”, but that investigators found no proof she or her aides meant to break laws governing the handling of classified information.
And as a Virginian, he could help Clinton win a battleground state in the Nov 8 race against Republican Donald Trump. Republicans are expected to formally nominate Trump during their four-day gathering next week in Cleveland.
In recent Reuters/Ipsos polling, only about 40 percent of Mr. Sanders’ backers said they would back Mrs. Clinton, and the crowd at Tuesday’s rally made it clear she still had work to do. And only 6 percent think Clinton did nothing wrong at all.
“For me”, Lopez said, “he’s a piece of trash”. Marco Rubio, who changed his mind and chose to run for re-election, leads likely Democratic challenger Patrick Murphy by just three points among registered voters, 47 percent to 44 percent. Taking things one step further, she also said today, “I don’t know who created Pokemon Go, but I’d try to figure out how we get them to have ‘Pokemon Go To The Polls!'”GET IT?!”
Another 18 percent say she is only slightly honest.
Trump and fellow Republicans have made the phrase and its variants a central theme in their bid to portray Obama as soft on the issue of national security, accusing him of failing to recognize the enemy even after a string of deadly attacks by Islamic State (IS) militants and their supporters over the past year in Europe and the United States.
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The gap between the Trump-leaning blue-collar whites and the white-collar whites and minorities who lean toward Clinton was substantial throughout, but may be most significant on two questions.