Warren Says ‘Nasty Women’ Will Vote for Clinton
An nearly equal number of Trump voters – 54 percent – said they are voting largely to oppose Clinton.
Young whites say they have a more favorable view of Clinton now than going into the fall.
“I really feel like the country benefits from this type of forum, and we’d be willing to have another one if they can squeeze it in, ‘ Conway said”.
Clinton now stands at 53% among voters under age 45, compared with 47% in the previous CNN/ORC poll.
Increasingly, Trump supporters are forced to cherry pick polls that show their candidate competitive, or to place their faith in crowd sizes and enthusiasm on the trail, metrics that often seem attractive to lagging campaigns. “I would like to promise and pledge to all of my voters and supporters and to all the people of the United Staes that I will totally accept the results of this great and historic presidential election – if I win”, Donald Trump said, emphasizing the last three words by pointing into the crowd.
College-educated white women selected the eventual victor of the popular vote every year from 1980 until 2008, however the margin has never been as large as polls indicate this year. The boost comes mostly from white non-college graduates, who prefer Trump by 62 to 32 percent.
On social media, several people pointed out that Warren had once called Trump “a nasty man”.
Another notable shift since the last CNN/ORC poll is the steep drop in support for Johnson, who falls from 7% to 3% overall.
On Sunday, Trump picked up his first endorsement of the general election from a major newspaper when the Las Vegas Review-Journal backed his candidacy. But the Massachusetts Democrat also tore into the state’s Republican incumbent, Sen.
“I’ve got news for you, Donald Trump”, Warren said.
The most promising finding in the poll for Trump is his continued edge as more trusted to handle the economy. Trump is ahead with that bloc by 4 points. Trump’s stumbling campaign threatens to wipe out the GOP’s majority in the Senate – and maybe even the House. But the economy continues to be voters’ top issue, 91% call it extremely or very important. “I happen to think we’re going to win”, Eric Trump said on ABC.
It is the first major newspaper to give Trump its blessing, though it might come with something of an asterisk: The Review-Journal was bought late previous year by the casino magnate and billionaire Sheldon Adelson, a Trump supporter and longtime Republican benefactor.
“I don’t see it happening”, Rove said.
“Wow! I don’t know about you, but I could listen to Elizabeth go on all day”, Clinton said when she took the podium. Democrats, eyeing multiple polls suggesting Clinton has all but sewn up the presidential race, are spending the final two weeks of this campaign working mercilessly to turn the entire GOP into Trump’s collateral damage.
“It’s definitely a turnout battle, which it always is, but this time especially”, said Susan MacManus, a political science professor at the University of South Florida.
Sen. Elizabeth Warren showed how nasty she could get Monday in a fiery talk for Hillary Clinton that turned Donald Trump’s “such a nasty woman” cut against him bigly.
The poll of 1,832 adults age 18-30 was conducted October 1-14 using a sample drawn from the probability-based GenForward panel, which is created to be representative of the US young adult population. The main “third party” threat in the 2016 election comes from Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson, who now polls at eight percent in the Pollster.com average of all polls in the Granite State.