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White supremacists barrack for Trump

Donald Trump leads all the national polls.

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White nationalists are encouraging Iowans, at least the ones who still own a landline, to vote for Donald Trump in the upcoming presidential primary election, through a campaign of automated phone calls and radio ads across the state. Sure. As we know from recent history, voters in Iowa and New Hampshire don’t start paying all that close attention to the race until about 30 days or so out from the actual vote – meaning that polling on what the race looks like tends to be an inexact science.

Trump also needled Cruz over his opposition to a federal mandate setting ethanol levels in gasoline.

Join me in supporting the only genuine candidate who can win in November, the great Donald Trump.

Bush finds himself far behind Trump in the polls, including in polls for the upcoming Iowa caucuses.

They are an enticing target for the pack of Republicans who seek to turn a second-place finish in the nation’s first primary into a boost in SC and beyond.

After a week on the receiving end of attacks by the billionaire businessman, including charges that the senator isn’t eligible to be president because he was born in Canada, Cruz launched a high-risk tactic that has befell every other Republican that tried it – attacking The Donald.

If you think you’ve heard Trump rouse rabble by saying “I don’t know” over and over again, you’re right.

Donald Trump is still calling Sen. It’s clear that among him, Christie, Kasich, and Bush, he’s the most viable candidate; the others lose some altitude in New Hampshire and Rubio finishes a strong second there (or maybe wins if there is a Trump meltdown). “I’m not going to get in the middle of all these candidate issues”, Priebus stated.

Clinton polls within the margin of error against Trump in the New England state.

The new survey found that only 46% of likely Iowa Republican caucus-goers realise that Cruz was born outside the US. Now Cruz is surging, rising to around 18 percent in national polls, according to HuffPo, against Trump’s dominating 36 percent. You can’t have a nominee who’s going to be subject to be thrown out as the nominee.

In any event, even if Trump and Cruz do well, there will be room for someone else, too.

Bush, who is swimming with Christie and Kasich in the same pool of establishment voters, would have been in the down column after dropped to 3 percent in December from 7 percent in October.

“I just don’t think the Senate ought to get into the middle of this”, McConnell said Sunday on ABC. But there’s no way to predict his turnout, since many of his voters don’t fit the profile of regular caucus attendees.

“The legal question is straightforward”, Cruz told reporters when asked about the citizenship dustup.

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He said in the last couple of presidential elections, Democrats were able to run against the Republican of their choice, leading to two victories for President Barack Obama.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks during a campaign stop before next months earliest in the nation presidential primary Monday Jan. 11 2016 in Windham N.H