Author Topic: Election 2016  (Read 169563 times)

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #500 on: August 18, 2016, 07:36:16 AM »
IRS - Hope you plan to audit these assholes.

Think Twice Before Using This Company

Jill Martinelli and Sabine Le Guyader have been designing the jewelry line Lady Grey since 2009, and in that time, Beyoncé and Rihanna have worn their designs. But their most famous customer interaction may be the one they just had with Ivanka Trump. Yesterday afternoon, Martinelli and Le Guyader posted a handwritten note to Trump, who just purchased one of their cuffs. The letter reads, "Dear Ivanka, Thank you for your web order! We're happy to let you know that the proceeds of your sale have been generously donated to the American Immigration Council, the Everytown for Gun Safety Organization, and the Hillary Clinton campaign. We hope you enjoy your new Lady Grey #helixcuff. Best, Sabine and Jill."

The two made their Instagram account private as of this morning, but have since made it public again. "The note was included in her package and shipped last week directly from our studio in Brooklyn," Martinelli told the Cut in an e-mail. "While we were flattered to receive an order from Ivanka Trump, our social and political views couldn't be further from those of the Trump campaign. When we received her order, we instantly felt compelled to take the money and donate it to a few organizations that were more aligned with our ideals." Presumably, Christie Brinkley is cheering somewhere.


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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #501 on: August 19, 2016, 12:29:17 PM »
Pew Poll: Clinton Leads Trump By 4 Points
By Sandy Fitzgerald   |    Friday, 19 Aug 2016

Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton leads by 4 points over GOP nominee Donald Trump in a new Pew Research Center poll that includes Libertarian nominee Gary Johnson and Green Party nominee Jill Stein.

According to the poll, released Thursday:
•Clinton: 41 percent;
•Trump: 37 percent;
•Johnson: 10 percent;
•Stein: 4 percent.

Independent candidate Evan McMullin, who only recently announced his candidacy, was not included in the poll of 2,010 adults conducted from August 9-16. The survey carried an overall margin of error of 2.5 percentage points.

The demographic differences are remaining consistent, reports Pew:

•Women: Clinton, 49-30 percent;
•Men: Trump, 45-33 percent;
•Voters with postgraduate degrees: Clinton, 59-21 percent;
•College graduates, Clinton, 47-34 percent;
•Some college experience: Trump, 41-36 percent;
•White voters without a degree: Trump 51-26 percent;
•College educated white voters: Clinton, 47-33 percent.
•White Protestants: Trump, 63-17 percent;
•Voters not affiliated with a religion: Clinton, 56-19 percent.

Supporters for both Trump and Clinton said their decision was made to vote against one or the other of the candidates, rather than for the candidate.

With Trump supporters, 44 percent said their vote is for Trump himself, while 53 percent said they were voting for him to oppose Clinton.

On Clinton's side 46 percent said they were voting for her to oppose Trump, while 53 percent said they were voting for her on her own merits.

http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/Pew-Clinton-Leads-Trump/2016/08/19/id/744284/#ixzz4HoAKXlYE

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #502 on: August 19, 2016, 12:31:01 PM »
Sabato: New Map Shows Hillary Surpasses 270 Electoral College Votes
By Sandy Fitzgerald   |    Friday, 19 Aug 2016

Hillary Clinton is the clear front-runner in the presidential race, political analyst Larry Sabato said Friday, pointing to his new electoral map that shows the Democratic nominee is already far past the 270 Electoral College votes she needs to win the election.

But, he said, there is still time for Donald Trump to mount a Harry Truman-like comeback.

"She has 348 electoral votes right now," Sabato, the director of the Center for Politics at the University of Virginia, told Fox News' "Fox and Friends" program. "Donald Trump has 190. Even the new campaign manager for Donald Trump, our friend Kellyanne Conway, has said that Donald Trump is indeed the underdog. And you have to embrace your role if you're going to change it."

Trump could learn a great deal from late President Harry Truman, said Sabato, referring to the late president as the "patron saint of candidates who are behind."

Truman was an incumbent who "captured the spirit of the underdog."

In Sabato's report, posted on his "Crystal Ball" website, New Hampshire, with just four electoral votes, is coming into play, with Clinton leading by about seven to eight points. The state is a reliable one for Democrats, after choosing John Kerry in 2004 and President Barack Obama in 2008 and 2012.

The projection site also counts Clinton as having 273 electoral votes from safe states and likely Democratic states, which puts her over the 270-vote threshold needed to win the presidency for the first time.

The Crystal Ball moved New Hampshire from leans Democrat to likely Democrat in the edition published on Thursday because the Democratic nominee has a seven- to eight-point lead according to polls in the state.

Sabato, Kyle Kondik, and Geoffrey Skelley wrote in their report that Trump is enjoying a surge of support among blue-collar, white voters who did not graduate from college, but that backing is not stretching to New Hampshire, which has the fourth largest percentage of white college graduates in the United States.

Trump still has the potential for plays in Pennsylvania, Ohio and Iowa, and without counting toss-up states, Sabato's latest battleground map shows Clinton firmly in the lead.

This means Trump needs to find a way not only to sweep the Republican states, but to turn one of the states deemed likely or safe Democratic to his side, the report's writers said, advising followers that anything can happen between now and November, but they would not "recommend betting your children's college funds on a Trump administration."

http://www.newsmax.com/Newsfront/larry-sabato-hillary-clinton-electoral-college-votes/2016/08/19/id/744349/#ixzz4HoApvOJ0

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #503 on: August 19, 2016, 12:33:56 PM »
Paul Manafort Resigns as Head of Trump Campaign
The latest shakeup in the Trump campaign comes amid reports of Manafort's work with pro-Russian forces in Ukraine
08/19/2016
Sam Levine
Associate Politics Editor, The Huffington Post

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/entry/paul-manafort-donald-trump_us_57b711aee4b0b51733a2dca3?axfx6obe2s7zaor&

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #504 on: August 19, 2016, 02:29:26 PM »
 :o  I am still in the "Never Trump" camp, but I give him props for this.  It has Kellyanne Conway written all over it.  His campaign shakeup is paying dividends already. 

The art of the apology: Trump issues uncharacteristic mea culpa
Published August 19, 2016
FoxNews.com

A kinder, gentler Donald Trump?

After a yearlong maiden voyage into politics in which he never uttered “sorry" -- even when he said a judge couldn’t be trusted because of his Mexican heritage, called his primary opponents names and more recently mused ambiguously that “Second Amendment people” might be able to do something about future Supreme Court nominations -- Trump appears to have discovered the art of the apology.

"Sometimes, in the heat of debate and speaking on a multitude of issues, you don't choose the right words or you say the wrong thing,” Trump said Thursday night at a rally in Charlotte, N.C. “I have done that. And believe it or not, I regret it. And I do regret it, particularly where it may have caused personal pain. Too much is at stake for us to be consumed with these issues."

Even those closest to Trump acknowledged the comments marked a new phase. On Friday, Eric Trump in an interview with Fox News suggested "Humble Trump" as a new nickname for his developer dad, whose buildings famously are gilded with marble and gold.

The non-specific mea culpa caught many by surprise, and came on the heels of the Trump campaign earlier this week naming bare-knuckles brawler and Breitbart boss Steven Bannon its chief executive. Trump backers have been begging him to tone down his blustery rhetoric ever since he won the GOP nomination and entered the general race against Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

Thursday’s uncharacteristic contrition was followed by another vow: "But one thing I can promise you is this: I will always tell you the truth."

Trump sort of apologized after insulting John McCain's war record. (Associated Press)

It also came as Trump planned a Friday trip to flood-stricken Lousiana, where tens of thousands of people have been displaced.

As much surprise as Trump’s comments generated, it was not the first time in the campaign that he gave what at least could be interpreted as an apology. After saying more than a year ago that people consider Sen. John McCain, R-Ariz., who served five years in a Vietnam POW camp a hero "because he was captured — I like people who weren't captured," Trump walked back his remarks on Fox News Channel.

"Certainly if there was a misunderstanding, I would totally take that back," Trump told “O’Reilly Factor” host Bill O'Reilly days later.

He also expressed regret about retweeting an unflattering photo of primary rival Ted Cruz’s wife, next to a glam shot of his own former model spouse.

“If I had to do it again, I wouldn't have sent it," Trump told The New York Times.

Until Thursday, that was about as close as he got to offering up an apology.

The comments came days after Trump named tough-talking Steven Bannon campaign CEO.

In addition to bringing on Bannon, the Trump campaign named longtime Republican pollster Kellyanne Conway campaign manager. Conway previously had expressed that “letting Trump be Trump” is a key to his success, but that she also would like to see a more serious tone and fewer insults.

“Maybe it’s just the mother in me,” she told The Washington Post this week.

Trump's Charlotte remarks, which were scripted, were not the first time he's signaled a pivot. He's repeatedly said that he planned to strike a more “presidential tone” as the Nov. 8 election approached -- but just as often, he has vowed to never change.

“I am who I am,” he told a Wisconsin radio station earlier this week. “It's me. I don't want to change. Everyone talks about, 'Oh are you going to pivot?' I don't want to pivot. You have to be you. If you start pivoting you are not being honest with people."

Not accepting Trump’s mea culpa -- and perhaps not surprisingly -- was the Clinton campaign.

"Donald Trump literally started his campaign by insulting people," Clinton spokeswoman Christina Reynolds said in a statement. "We learned tonight that his speechwriter and teleprompter knows he has much for which he should apologize. But that apology tonight is simply a well-written phrase until he tells us which of his many offensive, bullying and divisive comments he regrets -- and changes his tune altogether."

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/08/19/art-apology-trump-issues-uncharacteristic-mea-culpa.html

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #505 on: August 25, 2016, 12:52:59 PM »
After Clinton bounce, polls indicate tightening race in key battlegrounds
Published August 24, 2016
FoxNews.com

Hillary Clinton’s post-convention bounce may be coming back down to earth – at least in some parts of the country – as new polls show a tightening race against Donald Trump in several battleground states, especially when Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson is factored in.

A Monmouth University Poll released Wednesday showed Clinton holding onto just a 2-point lead in North Carolina.

She leads Trump 44-42 percent in the state, while Johnson is pulling 7 percent. The poll also shows Trump with a double-digit lead among independents.

North Carolina is one of several battleground states considered critical to Trump’s hopes of capturing the presidency in November. He still trails in most swing state polls, but the latest from Monmouth University marks an improvement over a recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist survey showing him down by 9 points in the state.

“North Carolina has given us tight presidential races over the last two cycles and this year appears to be no different,” Patrick Murray, director of the Monmouth University Polling Institute, said in a statement.

Meanwhile, another poll released Wednesday, by Florida Atlantic University, showed Trump leading by 2 points in Florida, 43-41 percent. Just last week, Monmouth University showed Trump down by 9 points in the state.

And a separate Monmouth University Poll released Monday showed Clinton holding a 4-point lead over Trump in Ohio. The survey likewise showed Johnson, who is expected to appear on the state’s ballot, pulling a sizable amount of support, with 10 percent.

Trump still has a long way to go in the polls, considering Clinton has a far more substantial lead in swing states like Pennsylvania and Virginia.

But the slight movement in his favor comes as the Republican presidential nominee has been barnstorming the country at rallies, town halls and fundraisers – yet Clinton has mostly stuck exclusively to private fundraisings events over the past week.

She was making a swing Wednesday through Silicon Valley to raise cash, while Trump was holding rallies in Florida and Mississippi.

Trump has been hammering Clinton at these stops over a string of reports about the overlap between the Clinton Foundation and State Department under her tenure. Most recently, the Associated Press reported Tuesday that more than half of the people outside government who met with Clinton while she was secretary of state gave money to the foundation.

"It is impossible to figure out where the Clinton Foundation ends and where the State Department begins," Trump told supporters in Austin on Tuesday night.

The Clinton campaign countered that the AP report “relies on utterly flawed data” and “cherry-picked a limited subset of Secretary Clinton's schedule to give a distorted portrayal of how often she crossed paths with individuals connected to charitable donations to the Clinton Foundation.”

The latest Monmouth University Poll in North Carolina was conducted Aug. 20-23. The poll of 401 likely voters in the state had a margin of error of 4.9 percentage points.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/08/24/after-clinton-bounce-polls-indicate-tightening-race-in-key-battlegrounds.html

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #506 on: August 26, 2016, 05:15:47 AM »
New Trump Ad: Clinton's Racist Remarks about "Super Predators"

https://www.instagram.com/p/BJkj25RD44E/
a

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #507 on: August 26, 2016, 08:11:06 AM »
New Trump Ad: Clinton's Racist Remarks about "Super Predators"

https://www.instagram.com/p/BJkj25RD44E/

Trump FINALLY had something that was getting traction on CLinton... the emails.  He FINALLY had something that msnbc was starting shows with.  He was being quiet, he was using the same stump speech for 7 straight shows, and he was making traction in the polls.

SO he had to change that, of course ;)

He calls hilary a bigot, which really isn't going to help him. But it sure is helping her suddenly ;)   He finally had her on the ropes, so he completely snatches defeat from the jaws of victory. 

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #508 on: August 26, 2016, 08:20:02 AM »
Trump FINALLY had something that was getting traction on CLinton... the emails.  He FINALLY had something that msnbc was starting shows with.  He was being quiet, he was using the same stump speech for 7 straight shows, and he was making traction in the polls.

SO he had to change that, of course ;)

He calls hilary a bigot, which really isn't going to help him. But it sure is helping her suddenly ;)   He finally had her on the ropes, so he completely snatches defeat from the jaws of victory. 

e-mails aren't going away.

the emails haven't gotten Hillary in trouble yet.
he is consistently going after blacks and Hispanics here lately.

the real damaging emails are supposed to drop before election anyways.
a

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #509 on: August 26, 2016, 08:32:13 AM »
e-mails aren't going away.

but you have to agree, they're not the monster headline they were last week.  FOX and MSNBC are both covering trump and hilary calling each other racists and bigots.  and trump's flipflopping.   Emails are a distant third place now.

He had her in a bad spot.  Now we're seeing his flipflops on loop, and we're seeing all his far-right CTer things on display.   

So while they aren't going away, we aren't hearing about them.  That helps hilary. 

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #510 on: August 29, 2016, 12:48:41 PM »
Clinton leads Trump by 7 in new poll
By Jonathan Swan
August 29, 2016

Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump nationally by 7 percentage points, a slight narrowing of the margin she held after the Democratic National Convention, according to a new poll.

The latest Monmouth University poll has 46 percent of likely voters backing the Democratic presidential nominee compared with 39 percent supporting the Republican nominee, Trump.

That's a tightening of the 13-point margin Clinton held earlier this month following her bounce out of the Democratic convention in Philadelphia.

“The margin has narrowed since her post-convention bounce, but Clinton is holding onto an underlying advantage over Trump among key voting blocs,” said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute.

In the latest Monmouth poll, 7 percent of likely voters support the Libertarian Party's nominee, Gary Johnson, while only 2 percent back Jill Stein of the Green Party.

Those numbers signal that neither third-party candidate is likely to make the 15 percent threshold required to be allowed onto the debate stage with Trump and Clinton.

Asked what was the most interesting finding in Monmouth's latest poll, Murray said it was the unprecedented proportion of voters who hold negative views of both major-party candidates.

"The number that really jumps out at me is the 35 percent of voters who don't have a positive opinion of either of them," Murray told The Hill in a telephone interview Monday.

"We have never seen anything like that."

Murray said he reviewed polling data back to the 1984 presidential election and found that the previous highest proportion of voters who didn't like either presidential nominee was 9 percent in the 1992 election between Bill Clinton and George H.W. Bush.

Murray added that his polling found that voters deeply distrust Clinton and Trump, and that voters' mistrust of both is illuminated by two issues that have been dominating the news lately.

For Clinton, most voters — 54 percent — thought that donors to the Clinton Foundation were given special treatment during Clinton's tenure as secretary of State.

And for Trump, only 24 percent of voters believed his excuse that the reason he isn't releasing his tax returns is because they were being audited by the IRS.

Still, while the trustworthy polls are terrible for both candidates, Murray said that Clinton's lead over Trump in favorability ratings — 34 percent to 26 percent — is a good omen for her on election day.

"If you take the differences between the net favorability of one candidate over the other, you will find it's within 2 points of what the final margin is," Murray said.

"It's a good indicator."

The new poll of 802 registered voters, conducted between Aug. 25-28, has a 3.5 percent margin of error.

http://thehill.com/blogs/ballot-box/presidential-races/293674-clinton-leads-trump-by-7-in-new-poll

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #511 on: August 29, 2016, 03:20:25 PM »
I agree with him.

Note to MSM: This Race Isn’t Over
Media cites the polls, the polls, but Election 2016 begins on Labor Day
by Keith Koffler | Updated 29 Aug 2016

It looks grim for Donald Trump. So say the bellyachers in the Republican Party and the early celebrators in the Democratic Party — and the media.

He’s down 10 points in some polls! Somebody get Hillary a good real estate agent so she can rent out her Chappaqua digs!

Well, Hillary may be measuring the drapes in the Oval Office, but it’s hardly curtains for Donald Trump.

Well, Hillary may be measuring the drapes in the Oval Office, but it’s hardly curtains for Donald Trump. For many reasons, Trump is in far better shape than he seems — and is actually in an excellent position to win.

Let’s start with the most obvious fact: Election Day is 10 solid weeks away. Washington groupthink tends to hold that because something is a certain way, it will continue on that path forever — and then everyone is shocked when something changes. But after the conventions, most Americans went back to their lives, enjoying the final days of summer and tuning out politics.

Presidential races tighten up toward Election Day. The same people who brought you the inevitable President Jeb Bush are now bringing you the certainty of a Clinton coronation. But the election race begins the day after Labor Day, when Americans (at least the undecided ones) get down to the serious task of choosing who they’ll support for president.

Still — the polls, the polls! The mainstream media says the polls show this race is all over — everywhere. Shut 'er down, no point in even holding the vote. You'd think America was North Korea, where the elections find the front-runner taking in 99.9879 percent of the vote.

But, you want polls? Let's look at actual polls. The big, scary polls showing Clinton ahead by 10 or 12 points tend to get the most attention. But as of Friday, Clinton was ahead of Trump by only 6 points in the RealClearPolitics average of recent polls. Some of the latest polls put the two neck and neck. And it's still August.

Still, Clinton isn't running against Trump. She's running against Trump, Libertarian Party candidate Gary Johnson, and Green Party candidate Jill Stein, who will each be on the ballot in all or nearly all of the states. When you factor in those two, neither of whom have a chance of winning, Clinton is ahead of Trump by only 4.5 points.

Yes, all this drama for a 4.5-point lead in August.

And Trump is even closer to Clinton in the polling averages of swing states he needs to take to get to 270 electoral votes. Trump is down by just 3.7 points in Florida, 4 points in Ohio, 3 points in North Carolina, 2.3 points in Nevada, and 0.2 points in Iowa. And he trails by just 3 points in the most recent poll in Oregon. If he wins those states and defends the ones he is supposed to win, he is at 271 electoral votes. And that's without Virginia, Pennsylvania, Michigan, Colorado or New Hampshire, states in which Clinton is decently ahead — but which some think may come into play.

Plus, Trump is finally running a more disciplined campaign, focusing on his policies and attacking Hillary Clinton instead of Khizr and Ghazala Khan.

And Trump is just now starting to spend money on ads. Clinton has saturated the airwaves, and Trump will finally start to have a say with anyone not fast-forwarding through the commercials. This may well help move some polls his way as Hillary's message gets redundant and Trump's selling points get a first look.

And how many people are lying about their preferences to pollsters? Trump is vilified in the media, and by Clinton and her many surrogates, as not just wrong for the country, but evil, racist, dumb, greedy, dishonest, reckless, and just plain mean. So, imagine some bright young thing — or perhaps someone with a Hispanic accent — is on the phone asking you if you support Trump. It may not be so easy for many, particularly independents, to acknowledge they'd vote for such a supposedly horrible person.

"Ashamed" Trump supporters are a widely accepted and understood polling phenomenon. The only thing that is unclear is how many of them there are.

Trump has also begun an aggressive outreach to minority voters. He has, in polling with Latinos and African-Americans, nowhere to go but up. And even small gains among these demographics could make a huge difference in states with large minority populations, which include most of the swing states.

People also seem to forget that the only debates that have occurred have been in TV studios between Trump and Clinton surrogates, or between Trump surrogates and journalists. One of the keys to Trump's victory in the primaries was his strong performance in the debates, where he relegated Jeb Bush from a giant to a lilliputian who, each debate — as Trump pointed out — was positioned further and further to the edge of the stage. Until, of course, he was off it entirely.

Trump also has far more to gain than Clinton during the debates. Many voters who don't like him are independents and moderate Republicans who may not have been paying such close attention during the primaries. Trump has a chance to reintroduce himself and assuage some of their fears, as stoked by the media, that he is a scary person who knows nothing about policy.

Trump is better known as a reality show host, and during the debates he can demonstrate his ability to sound presidential. Hillary, by contrast, is a known quantity on the political stage. Trump will have a chance to dispatch her with stinging criticisms in the manner he did with his hapless opponents during the Republican primaries.

And then, of course, there are the emails. We may not have seen the worst yet of Clinton's self-damaging missives. Wikileaks' Julian Assange has all but promised an "October surprise," indicating he has held some of the juicy stuff back for later use.

But perhaps the most important factor that should give Trump's supporters cause for optimism is the most essential dynamic of the election — this is simply not a status quo year. Americans are not happy with the way things are going, with respect to foreign policy, the economy, and even the culture of the country.

Nobody is more status quo than Hillary Clinton. And nobody is less so than Donald Trump.

http://www.lifezette.com/polizette/note-to-msm-this-race-isnt-over/

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #512 on: August 30, 2016, 10:23:45 AM »
Poll: Trump-Clinton Tied in Ohio, Close in Michigan, Pennsylvania
By Mark Swanson   |   Monday, 29 Aug 2016

Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton are deadlocked in Ohio and close in both Michigan and Pennsylvania, according to Emerson College's first general election poll.

The state-by-state results:

Ohio:

Donald Trump 42 percent
Hillary Clinton 42 percent
Gary Johnson 10 percent
Jill Stein 2 percent

Pennsylvania:


Clinton 46 percent
Trump 43 percent
Johnson 7 percent
Stein 2 percent
Michigan:

Clinton 45 percent
Trump 40 percent
Johnson 7 percent
Stein 3 percent

One demographic that varies wildly between the three states is with millennials:

Ohio: Clinton leads Trump by 18 points, 50 percent to 32 percent

Pennsylvania: Clinton leads Trump by just 3 points, 42 percent to 39 percent
Michigan: Trump leads Clinton by 12, 45 percent to 33 percent

Trump is leading among independent voters in all three Rust Belt states, ranging from a one-point lead in Michigan to a 17-point lead in Ohio; he leads 43 percent to 37 percent in Pennsylvania.

The favorability ratings for each candidate are rather consistent across the three key battleground states, too:

Ohio

Trump: 41 percent view favorably; 57 percent view unfavorably
Clinton: 42 percent view favorably; 56 percent view unfavorably

Michigan:

Trump: 40 percent view favorably; 55 percent view unfavorably
Clinton: 45 percent view favorably; 52 percent view unfavorably

Pennsylvania:

Trump: 40 percent view favorably; 58 percent view unfavorably
Clinton: 42 percent view favorably; 55 percent view unfavorably

The Emerson College Ohio poll was conducted from Aug. 25 to 27; the Michigan and Pennsylvania polls were conducted Aug. 25 to 28. The samples consisted of 800 likely general election voters with a margin of error of +/- 3.4 percent.

http://www.newsmax.com/Headline/donald-trump-hillary-clinton-emerson-poll/2016/08/29/id/745715/#ixzz4IpyXwwOl

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #513 on: August 30, 2016, 10:27:02 AM »
This forecast changes daily.  Interesting to look at the trends.  Hillary had a huge lead.  Trump had a slight light on 30 July.  Hillary a huge lead after the convention, which she maintains, but things are starting to tighten again. 

http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-election-forecast/

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #514 on: August 30, 2016, 10:43:24 AM »
This forecast changes daily.  Interesting to look at the trends.  Hillary had a huge lead.  Trump had a slight light on 30 July.  Hillary a huge lead after the convention, which she maintains, but things are starting to tighten again. 

http://projects.fivethirtyeight.com/2016-election-forecast/

just like 2008.... mccain had a lead twice.   once after winning the delegates, once after the convention.  This is 2008 all over again.  It'd take a miracle for trump to have a clear lead like hilary has.  He'll look okay in a swing poll here and there, but with his massive money disadvantage, he NEEDS a 3-5 point lead to cleanly win it.

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #515 on: August 31, 2016, 06:38:43 AM »
just like 2008.... mccain had a lead twice.   once after winning the delegates, once after the convention.  This is 2008 all over again.  It'd take a miracle for trump to have a clear lead like hilary has.  He'll look okay in a swing poll here and there, but with his massive money disadvantage, he NEEDS a 3-5 point lead to cleanly win it.

except this time, it ain't McCain.
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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #516 on: August 31, 2016, 06:50:12 AM »
except this time, it ain't McCain.

Mccain was a veteran, with gravitas, experience, and lots of dignity.

Trump accused mika/joe of an affair, accused huma of terrorism, and various other unfounded dumb shit on a daily basis.  The RNC is broke thanks to him. The Dem Senate thanks him.

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #518 on: August 31, 2016, 01:41:31 PM »
Current Electoral Vote: 262 Clinton/Kaine, Toss Ups 122, Trump/Pence 154

270 Electoral votes needed to win the Presidency.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/2016_elections_electoral_college_map.html

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #519 on: August 31, 2016, 01:44:55 PM »
Current Electoral Vote: 262 Clinton/Kaine, Toss Ups 122, Trump/Pence 154

270 Electoral votes needed to win the Presidency.

http://www.realclearpolitics.com/epolls/2016/president/2016_elections_electoral_college_map.html

Trump has a monster hill to climb.  But hilary is looking legit sick.  If she's sleeping 18 hours a day, that's huge.

did she have campaign events?  True she has nothing until debates?  Website said she had a few

Primemuscle

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #520 on: August 31, 2016, 02:24:24 PM »
Trump has a monster hill to climb.  But hilary is looking legit sick.  If she's sleeping 18 hours a day, that's huge.

did she have campaign events?  True she has nothing until debates?  Website said she had a few

There appears to be democratic campaign events booked right up until the election. Hillary is scheduled to be the main speaker at seven of these events (including the debates) through October 19. https://hillaryspeeches.com/scheduled-events/

It appears Clinton commented/responded to Trump's "south of the boarder" visit.

Trump's offical website lists only three events where he's the speaker. Interesting the events calendar only goes through September 9.
https://www.donaldjtrump.com/schedule This seems odd. -not sure what to make of it.


The picture of health?


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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #521 on: August 31, 2016, 05:40:13 PM »
Fox News Poll: Trump narrows Clinton's lead
By  Dana Blanton 
Published August 31, 2016
FoxNews.com

The race for the White House has narrowed.  A new Fox News Poll finds Donald Trump gaining ground in the head-to-head matchup, despite improvements from Hillary Clinton on top issues. 

In addition, this is the first time the poll offers a four-way presidential ballot (it preceded the two-way ballot). 

The poll finds Clinton garners 41 percent to Trump’s 39 percent, while Libertarian Gary Johnson receives 9 percent, and Green Party candidate Jill Stein gets 4 percent. 

The third-party candidates take more from Clinton than Trump, as she holds a six-point lead in the two-way matchup: 48-42 percent.  That’s at the edge of the poll’s margin of error.

CLICK HERE TO READ THE FULL POLL RESULTS

She had a 10-point head-to-head advantage earlier this month (49-39 percent), in the wake of the Democratic convention and Trump’s clash with the parents of a Gold Star soldier.

Clinton does well in the four-way ballot among blacks (+68 points), women (+15), and Hispanics (+19). 

Trump is favored by whites (+13 points), men (+13), whites without a college degree (+23), and white evangelical Christians (+55).

Independents go for Trump (38 percent) over Clinton (26 percent) and Johnson (20 percent), with Stein trailing (7 percent).

Party unity remains a problem for Trump, as only 74 percent of self-identified Republicans back him, while 81 percent of self-identified Democrats support Clinton. 

The four-way contest is also tight among just those who are “extremely” or “very” interested in the presidential race: Clinton 43 percent vs. Trump 42 percent, with Johnson at 7 percent and Stein at 3 percent.  That’s driven by the fact that Democrats (79 percent) and Republicans (80 percent) are about equally likely to say they are at least “very” interested.

The poll finds pros and cons for Trump.  His favorable rating hit a new high-water mark (42 percent).  Plus, the narrowing of Clinton’s lead in the head-to-head matchup is mostly due to Trump gaining ground rather than her losing support.  Yet he’s lost his advantage on handling top issues. 

More voters trust Clinton than Trump on terrorism by a three-point margin (49-46 percent) and the two candidates tie on handling the economy (48 percent each).  Trump led by 12 points on each of these issues as recently as May. 

On immigration, by a wide 77-19 percent margin, voters support setting up a system for illegal immigrants currently working in the United States to become legal residents over deporting them, and those supporting legalization back Clinton over Trump by 18 points.

“Trump has an opportunity to attract more support by moving off his hardline position on immigration.  Nearly half of Johnson and Stein supporters say they’d be more likely to vote for him if he did,” says Democratic pollster Chris Anderson, who conducts the Fox News Poll along with Republican pollster Daron Shaw. “Some of Trump’s supporters will be frustrated if he eases his promise of mass deportations, but they won’t find a more aggressive anti-immigration candidate elsewhere, so they’ll likely stick with him.”

And don’t expect major movement in the race over the next few weeks, as most Clinton (87 percent) and Trump (88 percent) supporters feel certain in their choice.  Plus, almost all non-Clinton supporters (87 percent) say they would “never” consider voting for her, and almost all non-Trump folks say the same about him (85 percent).

The Fox News poll is based on landline and cellphone interviews with 1,011 randomly chosen registered voters nationwide and was conducted under the joint direction of Anderson Robbins Research (D) and Shaw & Company Research (R) from August 28-30, 2016.  The poll has a margin of sampling error of plus or minus three percentage points for all registered voters.

http://www.foxnews.com/politics/2016/08/31/fox-news-poll-trump-narrows-clintons-lead.html

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #522 on: August 31, 2016, 06:02:43 PM »
It most interesting comment I derived from this interview is that HRC is addicted to power. This seems plausible. What I don't get is why it would set her apart from Trump. He to, is clearly addicted to power. The fact that he supposedly lays his personal life out with no restraint for all the world to see, seems to prove how powerful or untouchable he believes he is. Only an egomaniac would have the guts to do this. Is being this narcissistic a plus or a minus?  

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #523 on: August 31, 2016, 06:11:53 PM »
It most interesting comment I derived from this interview is that HRC is addicted to power. This seem plausible. What I don't get is why it would set her apart from Trump. He to, is clearly addicted to power. The fact that he supposedly lays his personal life out with no restraint for all the world to see, seems to prove how powerful or untouchable he believes he is. Only an egomaniac would have the guts to do this. Is being this narcissistic a plus or a minus? 

Would love to see Dr. Stein have more influence or make a push in this election but she just seems stuck in that 2 to 4% range.

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Re: Election 2016
« Reply #524 on: August 31, 2016, 06:19:56 PM »
Would love to see Dr. Stein have more influence or make a push in this election but she just seems stuck in that 2 to 4% range.

I know little about Dr. Stein so you'll get no argument from me. There has to be some reason she can't break out of that rut, which at this point is probably a good thing, depending on who you want elected president.