Share

Trump proposals would add $5.3 trillion to debt

The margin of error was +/-4.4 percent.

Advertisement

When asked what concerns them most about Trump, 33 percent said he doesn’t have the temperament to be President of the United States.

That’s compared with a combined 64 percent of voters who say they have concerns about Hillary Clinton’s use of a private email server during her tenure as secretary of state.

The findings from the Pew Research Center revealed widespread disenchantment toward this year’s presidential contest among American voters. Among black voters in North Carolina, 98 percent say they plan to vote for Clinton while just 2 percent plan to pick Trump, when the two are compared head-to-head. “However, we don’t see that happening with African-American voters in North Carolina”.

Hillary Clinton is leading Donald Trump by 6 points ahead of the first debate on Monday, according to a new national poll released Wednesday.

Neither candidate is widely trusted, with Clinton at just 31 percent and Trump at 41 percent.

Those affiliated with both major parties appear to be aligning behind their party’s nominee, with Trump attracting 94 percent of Republicans and Clinton garnering support from 92 percent of Democrats.

Trump is also generating support from those who sat out the last presidential election. Even among supporters, more said they’d feel relief rather than excitement if their preferred candidate won.

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton holds a narrow lead in the latest NBC News/Wall Street Journal presidential poll.

Among Clinton supporters, only her experience – at 32 percent – is mentioned as frequently as opposition to Trump.

Advertisement

When the Libertarian and Green Party candidates are included in the survey of likely voters, Clinton has 41 percent, Trump has 38 percent, Libertarian Gary Johnson has 11 percent and Green Party candidate Jill Stein has 2 percent.

A march in Miami