Most Georgia voters reject ‘America is in decline’ message
Among registered voters she led by six points before the convention, 43-37, and now leads 46-36. Clinton’s unfavorable rating is at 53 percent. Almost 63 percent of Americans have an unfavorable view of Trump, while 53 percent have an unfavorable view of Clinton. It is the campaign’s latest effort to pressure Republican nominee Donald Trump into releasing his returns.
The poll found that Hillary Clinton is also leading Donald Trump 52 percent to 37 percent among likely voters with 10 percent supporting neither. When other candidates are included, Clinton gets 39 percent, Trump 35, Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson 12 and Green Party candidate Jill Stein 4. This is not a primary election and the Clinton ads are far more professional and effective than the ads Trump faced in Florida last March.
The Marquette Law School Poll was conducted August 4 through Sunday, sampling 805 registered Wisconsin voters. The minor-party candidate needs to be receiving 15 percent in national polls to qualify for the first presidential debate, set for September 26, at Hofstra University. Last month, Feingold was at 48 percent and Johnson at 41 percent.
In the closely watched U.S. Senate race, Republican Sen.
House Speaker Paul Ryan’s approval rating remains sky high in Wisconsin.
Among registered voters, Democratic candidate Russ Feingold is supported by 49% while Republican incumbent Ron Johnson receives 43%.
Political independents were split down the middle when asked if Trump or Clinton was a bigger threat, while people who describe themselves as Democrats and Republicans are mostly split along party lines.
Seven percent of likely voters said they would vote for neither candidate, while 3 percent said they were undecided.
The SurveyUSA poll shows that, currently, Clinton supporters are more enthusiastic than Trump supporters.
Clinton’s numbers go up among likely voters in November. It has pulled its ads from Virginia and Colorado, where she is well ahead, but not from Pennsylvania. The former governor of New Mexico has broken into double-digit support in OH and Iowa (12 percent in each state) and improved in Pennsylvania (9 percent). Two-thirds said they are loyal citizens in the battle against terrorism.