MTSU poll: Trump leads GOP in TN, Clinton is least-liked
Six percent of likely voters in the S.C. GOP presidential primary said they were undecided. The latest numbers show Clinton with 45 percent of the vote with Sanders close behind with 43 percent.
The Marquette poll, which is the most extensive in the state, also looked at presidential preferences among Wisconsinites who said they will vote in the primaries.
According to a Monmouth University Poll released today, Clinton, 68, leads Sanders in Iowa by just five percentage points.
Among Democratic voters, only 42 percent would strongly favor, or favor, Sanders becoming president, statistically much less than the 77 percent who would support Clinton as president. On that question, Trump scored better than Senator Ted Cruz, a Baptist; former neurosurgeon Ben Carson, a Seventh Day Adventist; and Senator Marco Rubio, a Roman Catholic.
Although Clinton is leading her opponent U.S. Sen.
While Donald Trump continues to lead other Republican presidential hopefuls in New Hampshire with just over a week until the first-in-the-nation-primary election, the businessman could lose support to other candidates in a hypothetical three-way general election match-up, a new poll has found. As per the latest poll, Trump has support of 32 per cent among likely Republican caucus goers.
The poll has a margin of error of + or – 5.28 percent at the 95 percent level of confidence. Feingold gained 1 point and Johnson lost 1 point from November’s survey. Fifty-seven percent say their local public schools are receiving too little funding from the state, while 30 percent say they receive enough and 7 percent say schools receive more funding than they need. Between 46 and 47 percent supported legalizing concealed carry, while between 49 and 51 percent opposed the proposal.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll included responses from 1,673 people. In April 2015, opinion was reversed, with 31 percent saying the economy had improved over the past year while 26 percent said it had gotten worse.
The survey was conducted over the phone January 21 through January 24, and featured a sample of 806 registered voters throughout the state.