Hillary Clinton capitalised on growing support among
independent voters to surge to a five-point national lead against rival
Donald Trump barely a month before the US presidential election, a new
poll showed Friday.
The Democrat improved her standing to 45 per cent support
compared with 40 per cent for her Republican rival Trump in a four-way
race that includes lesser-known candidates Gary Johnson and Jill Stein,
according to the latest Quinnipiac University poll.
The result shows the former secretary of state extending her
lead by four points from last month’s Quinnipiac survey, further
solidifying the gains that Clinton’s campaign has registered since her
strong performance against Trump in their first presidential debate on
September 26.
In a two-person race, Clinton leads Trump 50 per cent to 44.
“Post-debate, Hillary Clinton checks all the boxes,” Quinnipiac poll assistant director Tim Malloy said in a statement.
“With her base of women and non-white voters now solidly
behind her and independent voters moving into her column, Donald Trump
gets a wake-up call.”
The poll of 1,064 likely voters nationwide shows a dramatic shift toward Clinton among those not registered with any party.
Independents now back her 46 per cent to 32 per cent, compared to 42-35 for Trump in late September.
Clinton stayed off the campaign trail Friday and Trump kept
his events to a minimum ahead of their second head-to-head debate, to
take place Sunday in St Louis, Missouri.
The Manhattan real estate billionaire is widely believed to
have not prepared extensively for their first showdown, while Clinton is
known for rigorously studying up before such events.
Sunday’s debate will be in the format of a town hall, with questions coming from audience members.
Trump held a town-hall-styled event Thursday night in New Hampshire, but appeared not to treat it like a warmup session.“Forget debate prep,” he said.
“Do you really think Hillary Clinton is debate-prepping for three days? Hillary Clinton is resting,” he added.
Trump has routinely charged that Clinton does not have the “stamina” to be president.
“She wants to build up her energy for Sunday night.”
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