Donald
Trump has fallen further behind Hillary Clinton and now trails her by 8 points
among likely voters, according to a new Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll, with 1 in 5
Republicans saying his vulgar comments about groping women disqualify him from
the presidency.
The national tracking poll was launched after Sunday night’s
second presidential debate, where Trump was pressed to explain his comments in
a 2005 videotape about grabbing women’s genitalia. He described the remarks,
which first surfaced on Friday, as “locker room” banter and apologized to
Americans.
The poll released on Tuesday showed Clinton, the Democratic
nominee, had increased her lead over Trump, the Republican nominee, to 8
percentage points on Monday from 5 points last week.
When asked to pick between the two major-party candidates, 45
percent of likely voters said they supported Clinton while 37 percent supported
Trump. Another 18 percent said they would not support either candidate.
Trump was under pressure during Sunday’s debate to restore
confidence in his struggling campaign after dozens of lawmakers repudiated him
over the weekend.
He hammered Clinton’s handling of classified information
while serving as secretary of state and referred to her as “the devil.” At one
point, he said he would jail Clinton if he were president.
Among those who said they watched at least portions of the
debate, 53 percent said Clinton won while 32 percent said Trump won.
The
results fell along partisan lines, however: 82 percent of Democrats felt
Clinton won, while 68 percent of Republicans felt that Trump won.
Among likely voters who watched the debate, 48 percent said they
supported Clinton while 38 percent supported Trump.
‘LOCKER ROOM TALK’
In the 2005 Access Hollywood video Trump boasted about making
unwanted sexual advances toward women.
“When you’re a star they let you do it,” he is heard saying.
Some 61 percent of those polled said that “lots of men”
occasionally engage in similar conversations, and 46 percent, a plurality, said
it was unfair to judge someone on conversations “that they did not intend for
anyone else to hear.”
Most of those polled said they believe Trump is a sexist, but
they were split on whether his comments disqualify him from being president.
Some 42 percent of American adults, including 19 percent of
registered Republicans, said Trump’s comments disqualified him, while 43
percent said they did not.
Among Republicans, 58 percent said they want Trump to remain
atop their party’s ticket, and 68 percent said the Republican leadership should
stand by him.
The video doesn’t appear to have worsened Trump’s standing among
women, who mostly had a low opinion of him already, according to Reuters/Ipsos
polling over the past 12 months.
When asked to pick between the two candidates, about 44 percent
of women chose Clinton while 29 percent selected Trump – roughly the same
proportion as measured in polls conducted before the weekend.
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Trump, however, appears to be shedding support among
evangelicals, who are usually a wellspring of support for Republican
presidential candidates.
Monday’s poll showed that Trump had only a 1-point
edge over Clinton among people who identified as evangelicals. That’s down from
a 12-point advantage for Trump in July.
The Reuters/Ipsos poll is conducted online in English in all 50
states. The poll of 2,386 American adults included 1,839 people who watched the
debates, 1,605 people who were considered likely voters due to their
registration status, voting history and stated intention to vote in the
election.
Among the likely voters, the poll counted 798 Democrats and 586
Republicans.
The poll has a credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of 2
percentage points for the entire group, 3 points for likely voters and the
debate watchers, 4 points for Democrats and 5 points for Republicans.
National opinion polls have measured support for the candidates
in different ways this year, yet most agree that Clinton is leading and that
her advantage has strengthened as the general election approaches.
RealClearPolitics, which tracks most major opinion polls, shows
Clinton ahead of Trump by an average of 7 percentage points, and that her lead
has grown since the middle of September.
Source:PMNEWS
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