Clinton leads Trump by 8 points
The poll showed that Clinton’s lead has grown from four to eight points following her nominating convention, a larger boost than Trump received from the Republican convention, which revealed a party split by divisions over the choice of candidate.
He delivered his remarks in a sweltering high school gym. Among college-educated women, she leads Trump by 19 percentage points, 57 percent to 38 percent.
Clinton this week said that she “may have short-circuited” when she claimed that FBI Director James Comey said “my answers were truthful and what I’ve said is consistent with what I have told the American people” about her use of a private email server during her tenure in the State Department.
Newt Gingrich says that “of course” Donald Trump’s economic plan doesn’t add up and adds that historically, no candidates’ numbers do.
The attacks flowed from the Republican nominee as he once again tore into Clinton as unstable, unbalanced and totally unhinged.
More critically, key swing states – such as Pennsylvania, Florida, Michigan and New Hampshire – where Trump has counted the core of his support – are all now in Clinton’s pocket. “What I told the Federal Bureau of Investigation, which he said was truthful, is consistent with what I have said publicly. I’ll be back a lot”.
The stop came after Trump announced what had proved to be elusive endorsements of House Speaker Paul Ryan, Arizona U.S. Sen. He also said he’s backing New Hampshire Sen.
Campaign signs for Ayotte – who rebuked Trump for his comments about the father of Humayun Khan, a Muslim American soldier killed in Iraq – lined the entrance to the gym where Trump spoke.
Satisfaction with both candidates remains low: almost 6 in 10 registered voters said that they are unhappy with both Clinton and Trump as major party candidates.
Clinton’s past policy speeches have doubled as an opportunity to attack Trump. “But for every one of those people he earns, he loses suburban independents or Republicans who are not going to be able to accept the man and what he seems to say and stand for”, says Michael Mezey, an emeritus political scientist at DePaul University, in Chicago.
Trump boasted about financing his own primary campaign and still besting the field, and cited taking in $80 million last month after opening up to donations.
Kingston also argued Clinton would waste her time trying to flip Georgia blue. Trump wants to build a wall between the United States and Mexico and now says he wants to suspend immigration from “terror countries” – though he has yet to say what those are.