Clinton: Trump most dangerous candidate in US history
Clinton addressed her presumptive opponent Republican Donald Trump, going as far as suggesting he is even responsible for increased playground bullying, saying, “Parents and educators across America are already anxious about what they’re calling the ‘Trump Effect, ‘ with bullying and harassment on the rise in our schools”.
The presumptive nominee also vowed to eliminate public college and university tuition for students of families that make less than $125,000 annually. Nine percent were undecided. “Suburban voters are divided, with 40 percent for Trump and 39 percent for Clinton”.
The poll also found U.S. Sen. “For all of this loss, for all of this grief, for all of the citizens of the tragedy in Benghazi has brought upon America – I blame Hillary Clinton”, said Smith.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Julian Castro-frequently seen as the future of the Democratic Party, the 41-year-old former San Antonio mayor delivered the keynote address at the 2012 Democratic National Convention and became the HUD Secretary in 2014.
As Republicans began their national convention in Cleveland Monday, presumptive Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton was in Minneapolis talking to teachers. For others, the event gave insight into the major themes we can expect the Republican Party and Donald Trump to harp on throughout the presidential campaign. “He even sounds like one, compared with Clinton’s flat Midwestern accent, but he lags by double digits in the state where they’ll both vote”.
Neither candidate is thought of positively by a majority of Empire State voters.
“They represent the rule of law itself, if you take aim at that and at them you take aim at all of us”, Clinton said at the annual convention of the NAACP held in the city along the Ohio River.
Trump’s selection of Indiana Gov. Mike Pence as his running mate was a good choice, voters in NY say 43 – 21 percent – but 59 percent of them don’t know enough about Pence to form an opinion about him.
Democrats say they will announce more speakers in the coming days, a list that will include politicians, advocates and celebrities.
The poll was conducted July 13-17 with 1,104 New York State voters, with a margin of error of +/- 3 percentage points, live interviewers calling land lines and cell phones. She leads Trump, 43 percent to 37 percent, among people making less than $50,000 annually and by 10 percentage points among people who are unemployed, 44 percent to 34 percent.