Monday, June 27, 2016

133 Days Till Election Day: New polls from North Carolina, Wisconsin, Florida, Colorado

STATE-BY-STATE POLLING


New polls in from North Carolina, Wisconsin, Florida and Colorado.

Here are the current averages from the battleground states:

Utah: Trump up by 5%
Kansas: Trump up by 3.45%
Georgia: Trump up by 3.1%
Missouri: Trump up by 0.75%
North Carolina: Clinton up by 1.3%
Colorado: Clinton up by 1%
Arizona: Clinton up by 1.6%
Florida: Clinton up by 2.1%
Ohio: Clinton up by 3.5%
Nevada: Clinton up by 3.9%
New Hampshire: Clinton up by 4.2%
Pennsylvania: Clinton up by 4.3%
Iowa: Clinton up for 5%
Virginia: Clinton up by 5.4%

Currently, Clinton has a 227 to 142 lead over Trump with 169 still in play.

NATIONAL POLLING


Two new general election polls from NBC News/Wall St. Jrnl and ABC News/Wash Post.

Currently, the composite national polling average has Clinton up by 7.2% over Trump.

TODAY'S HEADLINES


Trump camp scrambles to shape up before GOP convention

(AP) -- Republicans are sprinting to shape up Donald Trump’s presidential campaign before the party’s national convention in three weeks, even as leading members of the party carry a deep antipathy or outright opposition to his claim on the GOP nomination.

His campaign chairman said Sunday there’s a hiring spree in 16 states and the campaign is working with the Republican National Committee to solidify other matters. Paul Manafort said Trump is not all that involved in the race to organize an offensive against Democrat Hillary Clinton and catch up to her massive fundraising advantage.

'Yes,' I will vote for Hillary Clinton, Bernie Sanders says 

(LA Times) -- Hillary Clinton can count on a vote from Bernie Sanders come November, the Vermont senator said Friday.

“Yes,” Sanders said during  an interview with MSNBC  in response a question about whether he would cast his ballot for her. “I think the issue right here is I’m going to do everything I can to defeat Donald Trump.”

On Eve of SCOTUS Abortion Decision, Texas Accused of Suppressing Key Data

(NBC) -- The Supreme Court is expected to announce its decision Monday on Texas' abortion law, in what could be the most consequential ruling on the issue in a generation. The question: Do new requirements on abortion providers pose an unconstitutional "undue burden" on Texas women?

But among the reams of evidence presented to the high court and the public debate in Whole Woman's Health v. Hellerstedt, something is still missing: A full, official account of the initial impact of the law on Texas women.

Study Sees Debt Jumping Under Trump, Staying Steady Under Clinton

(WSJ) -- Donald Trump’s tax and spending proposals would greatly increase the national debt over the next 10 years, while Hillary Clinton’s combination of new revenue and new spending would have a nearly negligible effect on the country’s $14 trillion debt, according to a study released Sunday.

Under the plan put forward by Mr. Trump, the presumptive Republican nominee, the U.S. debt would grow to 127% of the entire economy, up from 75% today, according to the analysis by the nonpartisan Committee for a Responsible Federal Budget, which advocates bringing down the national debt.

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