Clinton campaign hits Trump for seeing Brexit as boon to his business
While Clinton did not directly mention presumptive Republican candidate Donald Trump, her argument was clear: Trump is not the kind of leader that could guide the United States through all the complications and economic uncertainty that comes with this kind of global incident. The difference is not statistically significant.
Forty-six percent of registered voters back Clinton, versus 41 percent who support Trump – slightly up from Clinton’s three-point lead in May, 46 percent to 43 percent.
Mr. Trump returned fire in the press release, saying Mrs. Clinton and Mrs. Warren are at odds over the Trans-Pacific Partnership trade deal and saying that Mrs. Clinton has raised tens of millions of dollars from Wall Street donors that Mrs. Warren has assailed.
Clinton’s support has risen significantly among male registered voters, jumping 11 percentage points since May to tie with Trump’s at 45 percent. -While most Americans disapprove of Clinton’s handling of her email while secretary of state (34-56 percent, approve-disapprove), they’re equally disenchanted with Trump’s handling of questions about Trump University (19-59 percent, with more undecided). Despite overtures from Trump, only 10 percent of Sanders supporters said they would vote for the billionaire.
Elizabeth Warren joined Hillary Clinton on the campaign trail for the first time on Monday, and proved herself to be a fiery force for her party’s presumptive nominee.
The 14-point swing has come during a time when Trump posted anemic campaign fundraising numbers, faced a fierce backlash, including from within his own party, for attacking a federal judge’s Mexican heritage, and endured widespread condemnation for his over-heated response to the attack on a gay nightclub in Orlando.
“She’s not Native American, she’s not 1/32nd, she has no Native American background, except for what her family told her”, Brown told reporters on a Trump campaign call happening hours after Hillary Clinton and Warren appeared at an event together. “I got in this race because I wanted to even the odds for the people who have the odds stacked against them”, Clinton said. “We’re ready. We’re going to have a good convention, and we’re confident that we are not behind the Clinton campaign”, Manafort said. Trump, on Twitter, said ABC’s poll sample was “heavy on Democrats”.
During her remarks Sunday, Clinton also acknowledged what may be similarities between some parts of the electorate in the United Kingdom and the United States — but didn’t seem fazed.
Of the Trump backers in this poll, 45 percent want him elected; 55 percent want to block Clinton.
The poll, which randomly sampled 1,001 adults between June 20 and June 23, also found that half of Americans are anxious about Clinton possibly leading the country should she win in November.