Clinton’s new ads try to reintroduce a famous figure
New poll numbers show Democratic candidate for president Hillary Clinton maintaining a lead over Republican candidate for president Donald Trump in Wisconsin, but Badger State voters are not very excited about either candidate.
The survey was conducted Wednesday through Sunday among a random national sample of 1,000 adults, with most interviews conducted before the mass shooting in Orlando, Florida over the weekend.
She’s under water, with 55 percent of respondents saying they have an unfavorable view of her and 43 percent with a favorable opinion. “Her supporters are more enthusiastic than Trump’s and more voters overall see her becoming a more appealing candidate than say that for Trump”.
The last Marquette poll in late March found Clinton leading Trump by more than 10 percentage points among registered voters.
A new poll tells Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump that voters trust his leadership on terrorism, but they can also be turned off by some elements of Trump’s style.
Other reasons people said they dislike included that they think he isn’t trustworthy (16 percent), lacks experience (11 percent), is corrupt (11 percent), and is sexist (11 percent). Her biggest obstacle to party unity continues to be young voters who’ve tended to support Democratic rival Bernie Sanders throughout the primaries-31 percent of voters under 50 have an unfavorable view of Clinton.
This isn’t surprising, given that one of the candidates for president has done anything he can to coarsen the tone of politics in the nation.
The official White House photos were taken in the summer of 2000 when Clinton visited Trump Tower for a political fundraiser for former New York Representative Ed Towns.
For Clinton, as has been the case for past Democrats, she struggles among white men with 75 percent viewing her unfavorably compared to 52 percent of white men viewing Trump unfavorably.
Trump’s difficulties are further marked by the fact that he’s rated favorably by just 47 percent of conservatives. Among likely voters in November’s election, Feingold has the support of 51 percent while Johnson is supported by 42 percent.
Among men, Trump led Clinton by 14 points in last week’s survey, but now leads by only nine points in this week’s poll – 51pc to 42pc.
Negative feelings about the GOP are also increasingly coming from within the party’s own membership.