Four percent (4%) of these voters choose Johnson, two percent (2%) Stein. An average of polls by RealClearPolitics shows her now 6.3 points ahead at 48.5 percent support to Trump’s 42.2 percent.
Clinton’s lead over Trump in national opinion polls has grown in recent weeks.
Forty-one percent said Trump’s controversial remarks about women from the Billy Bush conversation makes them less likely to support Trump, but 11 percent of respondents said it makes them more likely to support him, including 18 percent of white men surveyed.
A Washington Post/SurveyMonkey poll released the day of Clinton’s and Trump’s final debate showed Clinton leading Trump in electoral college votes to put her over the 270 majority needed to win the White House on November 8. Bill Clinton won in 1992 with 43% of the vote, but third-party candidate Ross Perot drew 19% of the vote.
Trump has a 46 to 41 percent edge among white Virginia voters and has an even larger margin among white voters who are not college-educated, 56 to 32 percent.
However, one of the polls in which Trump has consistently polled well – the LA Times/USC Tracking survey – takes data differently from other polls and as such is often at odds with other polls. Given similar either-or choices, 51% said they’d rather Barack Obama serve a life term as president than have a Clinton presidency, while 39% preferred a random lottery to pick the president than a Clinton presidency.
Eighty-percent of likely voters who identified as Republican say they would support Donald Trump, while 89% of those who identified as Democrats said they would vote for Clinton.
The interviewing for the poll, however, stretches back to October 10 and may not entirely reflect voters’ reaction to all of last week’s allegations.
Fifty-five percent of voters would support making Right to Work laws a constitutional amendment.
Unlike the second debate, which saw the candidates try to win over undecided voters in a town hall format, Wednesday’s debate will be structured like the first, with six 15-minute sections of questions, answers, and rebuttals.
Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, (D), candidate for Democratic presidential nomination in 2015. Using its polls-based election forecast, data-driven website FiveThirtyEight gave Clinton a almost 89 percent chance of winning the state. Every day is election day now in Arizona… More than half of participants who made less than $50,000 annually supported Clinton, whereas more than half who made between $50,000 and $100,000 supported Trump.
But the race remains tight in key battlegrounds like OH, and Trump has even edged Clinton in at least one national survey since the Billy Bush bombshell.