NBC’s Chuck Todd Talks Caucuses on Today in Iowa
The Thursday night debate will be hosted by MSNBC at 9 p.m.at the University of New Hampshire in Durham, the network announced Sunday, and will include all three Democratic candidates: Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders, and Martin O’Malley.
Of likely Republican voters, 61 percent said they are undecided.
Polling experts said it can often be hard to accurately predict the early states, which was shown in the 2008 Iowa caucus.
He said Iowa women, in particular, recognize that sense of perseverance in working for a better future for their families, and he predicted that their support would help Mrs. Clinton emerge from the caucuses victorious.
For those who have made their choice, Donald Trump remains firmly atop of the GOP field at 30 percent. “I have people that drive by, honking their horn saying “go Bernie” or ‘feel the Bern.’ Our area is more of a Democratic than a Republican neighborhood”, Schofield said.
“I just have to point out that the timing and some of the leaks that have led up to it are concerning”, Clinton said on ABC’s “This Week”.
Asked whether Rubio could win or come in second, his senior strategist Todd Harris laughingly responded with an obscenity and said the goal in Iowa is third, behind the flamboyant Trump and the highly organized Cruz.
She rebounded to win the New Hampshire primary, but Obama ultimately captured the nomination and the presidency.
According to a Des Moines Register/Bloomberg Politics poll, the former secretary of state now snags 45 percent of the vote to Sanders’ 42 percent.
Donald Trump stands on the verge of a potentially stunning victory in the state – and tempers are flaring in the final hours.
“My closing argument is: [You’re] going want the person who you’d want to be the commander-in-chief”.
In an apparent jab at Sanders, who has drawn huge crowds with his attacks on the Wall Street and the rich, Bill Clinton decried politicians who did little more than voice the frustration of voters.
On board his bus after a busy day that wasn’t quite over, Sanders seemed to still be marveling over his remarkable rise.
Democratic Hillary Clinton, in a tight race with Vermont Sen.
“It’s certainly the time when our industry is in the crosshairs”, said Mollyann Brodie, the president of the American Association for Public Opinion Research Brodie, told Politico. I mean, we’re all going to the same place, probably one of two places, you know?
“I think my judgment is pretty good”. “I’m doing really well with the evangelicals in Iowa”.
Trump continues to top the list of candidates likely Republican primary voters say they would never support, 35% say so, including 47% of those moderate or liberal voters. “I’d like to win Iowa”.