Opinions split on Trump’s chance to clinch Republican — News Analysis
Senator Ted Cruz is fourth in Ohio followed by Carly Fiorina and Marco Rubio. 54 percent of voters said Mr. Trump wasn’t trustworthy, while 61 percent said the same of Ms. Clinton.
Clinton and Trump’s leads in both Ohio and Florida were similar.
When voters were asked whether the top-tier candidates care “about the needs and problems of people like you“, Ms. Clinton and Mr. Trump were the only candidates who garnered “no” responses from more than half of those surveyed.
When Biden is removed from the equation and his votes go to second-choice candidates, Clinton leads in Ohio at 52 percent, followed by Sanders at 26 percent. By comparison, 7 percent say the same for Kasich, 4 percent for Carson.
Indeed, recent trends show that major shifts in a candidate’s popularity can happen even within a few months. Rubio has 12% and Fiorina 8%. Bush is viewed favorably by 47 percent and unfavorably by 29 percent.
Meanwhile, Carson bests all three.
Trump has captivated likely Republican primary voters in California, holding 17 percent support.
Conservative, blue-collar, working-class Montanans are lining up behind Trump, said Hutchings, of Townsend. Few Republican primary voters are very confident in the ability of any of the three to handle an global crisis.
While the polls show Clinton holding her lead in all three states, the responses on the trust question suggest the frequent developments on her personal email scandal are taking a toll.
There is a real chance that Donald Trump could be the Republican presidential nominee.
However, Trump doesn’t fare as well in a hypothetical general election matchup against Clinton, with the former secretary of state narrowly beating Trump in every state.
“I think a lot of people miss the sort of brilliance of what Trump is doing”. They also disputed criticisms of their campaigns. Sanders is seen as favorable by 36 percent and unfavorable by 29 percent. “I expect it to be a bumpier ride than what you’d usually see, where it’s kind of clear how the trends are going”.
“Because he’s a master brander”, Clinton responded. Seven in 10 say they do, including majorities of Republicans, Democrats and independents.
Media analysis refer that Republicans made their goal of decreasing the favoritism of the ex first lady, because the same PPP poll placed Clinton with 55 percent of support in August.
The economy and jobs are the top priority for voters across party lines.
The surveys were all conducted September 25th through October 5th. Quinnipiac University surveyed 1,173 Florida voters with a margin of error of +/- 2.9 percentage points. In the poll released Wednesday, she trails Carson and Sen.