Author Topic: Election 2016  (Read 170840 times)

Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #900 on: October 27, 2016, 01:04:10 PM »
Fox News Poll: Clinton leads Trump by three points
By  Dana Blanton 
Published October 26, 2016
FoxNews.com

With less than two weeks to go, the race for the White House has narrowed as Hillary Clinton now has a three-point advantage over Donald Trump.

That’s within the margin of error of the national Fox News Poll of likely voters.

Clinton is ahead of Trump by 44-41 percent.  Another one-in-ten back a third-party candidate and four percent are undecided.  Last week she was up by six points (45-39 percent) and before that by seven (45-38 percent). 

The poll, released Wednesday, finds Clinton leads 49-44 percent in the head-to-head matchup.  That 5-point advantage is at the edge of the error margin.  She was up 7 a week ago (49-42 percent).

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL POLL RESULTS.

Trump is helped by increased backing among independents and greater strength of support: 68 percent of those backing Trump support him “strongly,” compared to 61 percent for Clinton. 

Independents favor Trump over Clinton by 13 points (41-28 percent).  He had a 7-point advantage last week, and two weeks ago they were tied at 35 percent each.  Third-party candidates play a role here, as Gary Johnson (14 percent) and Jill Stein (7 percent) receive the combined support of more than one-in-five independents.

In the four-way race, Trump leads among whites (+14 points) and men (+5), although his best groups remain white evangelical Christians (+56) and whites without a college degree (+28).

Clinton has commanding leads among blacks (+77 points), unmarried women (+27), voters under 30 (+18), and women (+10).  First-time voters are also more likely to back her (+16). 

The candidates garner almost equal backing among the party faithful:  83 percent of Democrats back Clinton, while 81 percent of Republicans support Trump.   

“To be competitive, Trump needs to consolidate support among Republicans and carry independents,” says Republican pollster Daron Shaw.  “That’s where he’s made in-roads in the last week, mostly by focusing his attention on the economy and Obamacare.”   Shaw conducts the Fox News Poll with Democratic counterpart Chris Anderson. 

Trump’s substantive strength is the economy.  He’s trusted over Clinton by four points, yet that’s the only issue where he bests her.  More trust Clinton to handle foreign policy (+15 points), immigration (+3), and terrorism (+3). 

Who would voters put across the table with Russian President Vladimir Putin?  More trust Clinton to negotiate with Putin by 3 points (47-44 percent among registered voters).  That’s down from a 13-point lead on this measure in April (53-40 percent). 

All in all, likely voters don’t think Trump is up to the task:  less than half think he’s qualified to be president (46 percent) and even fewer feel he has the temperament to serve effectively (36 percent).  Plus, over half lack confidence in his judgment in a crisis (56 percent). 

Clinton trounces Trump on each of those measures:  64 percent believe she’s qualified, 62 percent say she has the temperament, and 56 percent are confident in her judgment.

Plus, Clinton continues to receive more positive personal ratings.  She has a net negative rating of eight points (45 favorable vs. 53 unfavorable), while Trump is underwater by 14 (42 favorable vs. 56 unfavorable).  In addition, when undecided voters and those backing third-party candidates are combined, 26 percent have a favorable view of Clinton vs. 18 percent for Trump. 

Yet despite Trump’s weaknesses on traits, it’s still a tight race.  That’s because, at least in part, lots of folks prioritize issues when deciding their vote.  By a 59-28 percent margin, more say their decision is about the issues as opposed to the character of the candidates.  Those backing Trump are more likely to be voting on issues than character by a wide 57-point margin (73-16 percent).  For Clinton supporters, the choice is more about issues by 12 points (47-35 percent). 

Compared to 2008, this is a more character driven election.  At that time, voters said issues were more important than personal qualities by a 71-14 percent margin. 

"The bottom hasn't fallen out for Trump and Clinton hasn't pulled away, but the race isn’t as close as the 3-point lead suggests,” says Anderson.  “Trump needs a solid majority of undecided voters and wavering supporters of third-party candidates, and that’s extremely unlikely since most of them think he lacks the judgment, temperament, and qualifications to be president."

There are a couple of areas where the two are about evenly matched.  First, 52 percent feel Clinton “stands up” for people like them, and 49 percent feel that way about Trump. 

Also on their honesty -- or lack thereof:  a record-low 30 percent of likely voters think Clinton is honest and trustworthy, while 34 percent say Trump is. 

Pollpourri

Here are five additional takeaways from the poll.

- 63 percent of Trump’s supporters believe things in the United States generally favor “other people,” rather than people like them.  Forty-four percent of Clinton’s supporters feel that way.

- Twice as many voters expect Clinton to win as think Trump will (64-26 percent).  Fully 86 percent of Democrats think Clinton will win, while 49 percent of Republicans think Trump will.   

- Trump supporters (34 percent) are more than three times as likely as Clinton supporters (10 percent) to say they won’t accept the election outcome if their candidate loses.  Eighty-eight percent of Clinton supporters say they’ll accept the outcome, up from 74 percent in September.

- The generic congressional ballot test is also tight:  47 percent back the Democratic candidate in their congressional district, while 45 percent support the Republican.  Among those backing the GOP congressional candidate, 79 percent go for Trump in the four-way presidential race.  Clinton gets 82 percent of those backing the Democratic candidate.

“Models suggest a 2-point Democratic advantage on the generic ballot would result in a gain of about 11 seats in the House and 4 in the Senate,” says Shaw.  “That means the GOP would retain an edge of about 20 seats in the House, while the Senate would be very much up for grabs.”

- The political parties are about evenly matched in popularity among likely voters.  The Democratic Party has a net positive rating of four points (51 percent favorable vs. 47 percent unfavorable).  The Republican Party has a net negative rating by just one point (48 percent favorable vs. 49 percent unfavorable).

The Fox News Poll is based on landline and cellphone interviews with 1,309 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from October 22-25, 2016.  The survey includes results among 1,221 likely voters.  The margin of sampling error is plus or minus 2.5 percentage points for results among both registered and likely voters.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/10/26/fox-news-poll-clinton-leads-trump-by-three-points.html

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #901 on: October 27, 2016, 10:19:11 PM »
" More trust Clinton to handle foreign policy (+15 points), immigration (+3), and terrorism (+3). "


Amazing, really.

Yamcha

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #902 on: October 28, 2016, 03:07:41 AM »
a

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #903 on: October 28, 2016, 05:13:20 AM »
 :D

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #904 on: October 28, 2016, 06:27:17 AM »


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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #905 on: October 28, 2016, 07:51:31 AM »
Reliable AI system predicts Trump will win
nypost ^
Posted on 10/28/2016, 10:01:53 AM by ChicagoConservative27

A data-crunching artificial intelligence system that’s correctly predicted the last three US presidential elections is picking Donald Trump to be the next commander in chief.

The AI system, called MogIA, crunches 20 million data points from sites such as Google, Facebook, Twitter and YouTube to spew out its predictions, CNBC reported.

It shows that Trump has overtaken the social media engagement numbers of Barack Obama’s peak in 2008 — by 25 percent.

And that’s important, because the candidate in each election who led in engagement data ended up winning the presidency, according to MogIA creator Sanjiv Rai, founder of an Indian startup company called Genic.ai “If Trump loses, it will defy the data trend for the first time in the last 12 years since internet engagement began in full earnest,” Rai told CNBC.

But Rai noted that the massive amount of data in social media posts is tough to analyze. Just because somebody engages with a Trump tweet, it doesn’t mean they also support him.

(Excerpt) Read more at nypost.com ...


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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #906 on: October 28, 2016, 08:35:12 AM »
a

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #907 on: October 28, 2016, 03:03:36 PM »
 :D :D :D :D :D

a

Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #908 on: October 28, 2016, 03:05:02 PM »

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #909 on: October 31, 2016, 10:29:29 AM »
Praise Kek!  :D

a

Dos Equis

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Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #911 on: October 31, 2016, 03:26:14 PM »
 :o

Pollster: “The Dam is About to Break” on Hillary
Voters abandoning establishment candidate in droves
Paul Joseph Watson -  October 31, 2016 

According to former Jimmy Carter pollster Pat Caddell, Hillary Clinton is hemorrhaging support as a result of the FBI announcement and we could see a repeat of the 1980 election when anti-establishment candidate Ronald Reagan won in a landslide.

Caddell drew comparisons to the 1980 presidential race, which was close right up until the final days before the electorate abandoned Carter and rallied around the anti-establishment candidate, leading to Reagan taking victory in a landslide.

Caddell noted that Carter’s entire campaign had been built around portraying Reagan as unqualified and “dangerous,” in a similar vein to how Clinton has demonized Trump.

Caddell explained that the polling between Reagan and Carter was close up until the final weekend when “the dam broke” and Reagan shot ahead by ten points.

Stating that he had been looking at the data regarding unfavorability ratings for both Clinton and Trump, Caddell noted that since Friday, large numbers of voters had been structurally “moving against the status quo – the incumbent who is essentially Hillary Clinton.”

As an ABC News poll found, Hillary’s unfavorability rating just hit its highest ever mark.

Caddell said that the latest information regarding the FBI re-opening its investigation into Hillary’s email scandal was the “popper” that “could open up significantly before it’s over,” meaning it would be the decisive factor that enables Trump to defeat Hillary.

http://www.infowars.com/pollster-the-dam-is-about-to-break-on-hillary/


Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #912 on: October 31, 2016, 04:34:34 PM »
Clinton’s unfavorable rating hits new high in poll | Trump targets Democratic states in final sprint
Published: Oct 31, 2016

Sixty percent of voters view Hillary Clinton unfavorably, according to a ABC News/Washington Post poll released Monday morning, the highest level of unpopularity yet for the Democratic presidential nominee.

Her Republican opponent Donald Trump is seen unfavorably by essentially as many, 58%. Overall, the race for president is heading down to the wire, with the poll showing Clinton leading Trump among likely voters by just one point, 46% to 45%. The poll was taken Wednesday through Saturday.

Using the last two nights’ results, after FBI Director James Comey revealed a further Clinton-related email investigation, 47% of the Democratic nominee’s supporters said they were very enthusiastic about her, compared with 51% across the previous six nights.

Trump targets Democratic states: Donald Trump is redirecting his energy toward traditionally Democratic states in the final stretch of the 2016 campaign, seeing a fresh opportunity after the announcement Friday that the FBI would again examine emails related to Hillary Clinton’s time as secretary of state.

The Washington Post writes Trump and his advisers spent the weekend deliberating ways to seize on what they see as a dramatic turn in the campaign’s closing chapter and scramble the political map. On Sunday, Trump held rallies in Colorado and New Mexico, and he is scheduled to make two stops Monday in Michigan. He is expected to visit Wisconsin on Tuesday.

Early turnout tilts toward Democrats: While Trump is newly focusing on Democratic states, Clinton has established a slim edge over her rival in early-voter turnout in several vital swing states, the New York Times reports. In Florida, Nevada and elsewhere, Democrats are outperforming Republicans, the Times writes.

What’s on state ballots: There’s much more on the ballot around the country on Nov. 8 than just Clinton versus Trump. MarketWatch has rounded up some of the hottest initiatives, including those on marijuana legalization and raising the minimum wage. Check them out here.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/clintons-unfavorable-rating-hits-new-high-in-poll-trump-targets-democratic-states-in-final-sprint-2016-10-31

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #913 on: October 31, 2016, 05:38:08 PM »

Yamcha

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #914 on: November 01, 2016, 03:49:48 AM »
Investigating Donald Trump, F.B.I. Sees No Clear Link to Russia

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/11/01/us/politics/fbi-russia-election-donald-trump.html?_r=1


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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #917 on: November 01, 2016, 07:56:19 AM »
48,000 More Republicans Than Democrats in Florida’s First Coast Vote Early - Damn good sign!


Around 48,000 more Republicans than Democrats have already voted in Florida’s First Coast region, which encompasses five counties around Jacksonville.

Local station WOKV reports that Republicans are leading Democrats in early ballots, and over 40,000 independent voters have also voted early. That’s 19 percent of unaffiliated Florida voters in the counties of Clay, Dvual, Nassau, and St. Johns. Thirty-three percent of registered GOP voters in that area have already voted, along with 28 percent of Democrats.

http://www.godlikeproductions.com/forum1/message3343545/pg1

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #918 on: November 01, 2016, 08:41:13 AM »
Will be VERY interesting to see if Obammer keeps his date with the Hill campaign trail in Ohio today.

Hill calling Huma just "one of her staffers" now.

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #919 on: November 01, 2016, 08:48:29 AM »
Will be VERY interesting to see if Obammer keeps his date with the Hill campaign trail in Ohio today.

Hill calling Huma just "one of her staffers" now.

http://nypost.com/2016/11/01/huma-abedin-learned-fbi-was-looking-at-her-emails-from-the-press


 :D

Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #920 on: November 01, 2016, 10:58:00 AM »
Sheldon Adelson Commits $25 Million for Corruption Ads Targeting Clinton

Sheldon Adelson, Mike Pence AFP
by ALEX SWOYER
31 Oct 2016
Washington, DC

Billionaire Sheldon Adelson is reportedly committing at least $25 million to Future 45, a super PAC controlled by Joe and Marlene Ricketts.
According to Fox News’s Ed Henry, the money will be used to focus on corruption ads targeting Hillary Clinton in the final week ahead of the election on Nov. 8.

“It helps Republicans down ballot, but also is a sign big money Republicans who doubted Trump are now betting big as revelations from the FBI and WikiLeaks heat up,” Henry reports on Monday evening, noting that Trump and Adelson met in Las Vegas on Sunday.

“The $25 million from Adelson — it’s a floor, not a ceiling,” Henry adds.

http://www.breitbart.com/2016-presidential-race/2016/10/31/report-sheldon-adelson-commits-25-million-corruption-ads-targeting-clinton/?utm_source=facebook&utm_medium=social

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #921 on: November 01, 2016, 11:49:27 AM »
BREAKING: PA STATE POLICE RAID Democrat Group For Evidence Of Voter Fraud

vote-polling-place Wow! Pennsylvania state police have raided Democrat-linked group FieldWorks looking for evidence of voter fraud.

Here’s an ad FieldWorks put on their Facebook page: poll-work-pa

They’re under investigation.

PA State Police Raid Democrat Office Committing Voter Fraud https://t.co/0LySQPcFUU

— Jack Posobiec 🇺🇸 (@JackPosobiec) November 1, 2016

Philly.com reported:

Pennsylvania state police have raided a Delaware County political field office seeking evidence of possible voter-registration fraud, according to court records.

In a warrant filed late last week in County Court, investigators said they were seeking documents, financial information, and lists of employees at the Norwood office of FieldWorks LLC, a national organization that often does street work for Democrats, records show.

The warrant did not specify the nature of the probe, but said agents also were looking for “templates . . . utilized to construct fraudulent voter registration forms” and “completed voter registration forms containing same or similar identifying information of individuals on multiple forms.”

Read the rest here. But Democrats say voter fraud doesn’t happen? They’re wrong.

We need Voter ID!



http://www.thegatewaypundit.com/2016/11/breaking-pa-state-police-raid-democrat-group-evidence-voter-fraud/

Dos Equis

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #922 on: November 01, 2016, 02:57:05 PM »
Zogby to Newsmax: Hillary's in Trouble, but Race Still a Squeaker
Tuesday, 01 Nov 2016

The zig-zagging polls that have had both Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton leading in the presidential election in recent days show "it's anybody's race" — although the negatives are piling up the Democratic candidate, veteran pollster John Zogby tells Newsmax TV.

Last week, an ABC poll showed Clinton leading Trump by 14 points, but on Monday it turned into a 1-point lead for Clinton, and on Tuesday, a 1-point lead for Trump just a week before voters go to the polls.

"Very simply [Clinton has] been in a downward spiral for the last nine days and so this was not an overnight thing or a [FBI Director James] Comey thing. This has been a slow and steady decline by Hillary," Zogby, senior partner at John Zogby Strategies, said Tuesday to Steve Malzberg on "America Talks Live."

See Steve Malzberg on Newsmax TV: Tune in beginning at 12 PM EDT to "America Talks Live" — on FiOS 115/615, YouTube Livestream, Newsmax TV App from any smartphone, NewsmaxTV.com, Roku, Amazon Fire — More Systems Here

"Her negatives have gone up and the Comey thing furthers the negatives going up. [We see] the level of people who trust her going up again and then we also see people who said they were leaning towards Hillary Clinton … say that they're less likely to vote for her.
 
"In a close election as things are developing the way they are, that 7 percent who were leaning towards her changing their minds becomes pretty huge."

Still, says Zogby, who directs the Keenan Center for Entrepreneurship, next Tuesday is still very much up in the air.

"Oh, it's anybody's race," Zogby told Malzberg. "We have eight more new cycles, maybe 16 more new cycles between now and then."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsmax-Tv/john-zogby-hillay-trouble-race/2016/11/01/id/756439/#ixzz4OnSLJrSn

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Yamcha

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #924 on: November 02, 2016, 06:52:44 AM »


Trump called it
a