Trump roiled the presidential race and sent the Republican establishment into convulsions last month when he described someMexicanimmigrants as criminals and “rapists”.
He tops the list of candidates that voters say there’s “no way” they’d supporthim. Kasich replaces former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who earned just 2 percent of the vote in the Quinnipiac poll and slipped to 11th in the POLITICO average.
Trump on July 30, 2015 in Ayr, Scotland. Trump’s new nationwide numbers are especially significant as the first presidential debate looms on Fox News. Trump was in fourth place in that survey at 11 percent, with Bush as the clear front-runner in Florida with 28 percent. News reported. Jeb Bush followed in second place, far behind with 12 percent. His comments have created a media frenzy.
Senator John McCain has been an outspoken critic of Trump, so how do GOP voters feel about the two men these days? The five-day rolling online poll had the real-estate mogul and reality TV star at 15 percent among Republicans on Friday before rocketing to 24.9 percent on Tuesday.
A new report on taxpayer-supported National Public Radio (NPR) questions whether Trump has staying power in the race, whether he will be able to build a strong and sustainable organization that can energize solid, long-lasting voter support.
In 2012, despite Republican Mitt Romney gathering 60 percent of white voters, he still lost the bid to President Barack Obama by five million votes.
But Donald Trump, a highly contested figure, however, would lose in a hypothetical match against the favorite for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton. Clinton also clings to a statistically insignificant lead over Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, 44-43 percent. Rand Paul, and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee all garnered 6 percent. Actually, that poll has Trump with a full 20 percent of the Republican and Republican-leaning voters. Bush fell to the number 3 spot at 10 percent.
If Republicans could get someone else through the primary, they may have a chance.
It is worth mentioning that Ohio Governor John Kasich, who only entered the race last week, also showed promising results in the poll, nearly doubling his support. Her favorability is down but she still leads other Democratic contenders for the presidential nomination.
The Quinnipiac University Poll shows Sanders trailing Hillary Clinton. Instead, Trump is gaining momentum ahead of next week’s first Republican debate, a new Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll shows.
US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), who is running as a Democrat, grabs 17% of the vote. Walker would beat Sanders and tie Biden.
New Poll: Donald Trump Beating Everyone For President–Except Top Democrats
Trump roiled the presidential race and sent the Republican establishment into convulsions last month when he described some Mexican immigrants as criminals and “rapists”.
He tops the list of candidates that voters say there’s “no way” they’d support him. Kasich replaces former Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who earned just 2 percent of the vote in the Quinnipiac poll and slipped to 11th in the POLITICO average.
Trump on July 30, 2015 in Ayr, Scotland. Trump’s new nationwide numbers are especially significant as the first presidential debate looms on Fox News. Trump was in fourth place in that survey at 11 percent, with Bush as the clear front-runner in Florida with 28 percent. News reported. Jeb Bush followed in second place, far behind with 12 percent. His comments have created a media frenzy.
Senator John McCain has been an outspoken critic of Trump, so how do GOP voters feel about the two men these days? The five-day rolling online poll had the real-estate mogul and reality TV star at 15 percent among Republicans on Friday before rocketing to 24.9 percent on Tuesday.
A new report on taxpayer-supported National Public Radio (NPR) questions whether Trump has staying power in the race, whether he will be able to build a strong and sustainable organization that can energize solid, long-lasting voter support.
In 2012, despite Republican Mitt Romney gathering 60 percent of white voters, he still lost the bid to President Barack Obama by five million votes.
But Donald Trump, a highly contested figure, however, would lose in a hypothetical match against the favorite for the Democratic nomination, Hillary Clinton. Clinton also clings to a statistically insignificant lead over Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, 44-43 percent. Rand Paul, and former Arkansas Gov. Mike Huckabee all garnered 6 percent. Actually, that poll has Trump with a full 20 percent of the Republican and Republican-leaning voters. Bush fell to the number 3 spot at 10 percent.
If Republicans could get someone else through the primary, they may have a chance.
It is worth mentioning that Ohio Governor John Kasich, who only entered the race last week, also showed promising results in the poll, nearly doubling his support. Her favorability is down but she still leads other Democratic contenders for the presidential nomination.
The Quinnipiac University Poll shows Sanders trailing Hillary Clinton. Instead, Trump is gaining momentum ahead of next week’s first Republican debate, a new Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll shows.
US Sen. Bernie Sanders (I-Vermont), who is running as a Democrat, grabs 17% of the vote. Walker would beat Sanders and tie Biden.
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