Donald Trump continues to climb in national probes regarding the Republican presidential nomination, while Hillary Clinton is ahead of him in universal election matches.
Because the media focused on Trump and next year Gop Primary, the political reality is that the bombular billionaire greatly follows Clinton by 53 to 40 percent among adults.
And also among registered voters by 44 to 50 percent, although in terms of sampling error at the latest Washington Post/ABC News survey.
In particular, the up-to-date survey reveals that 69 percent of adult Americans said that they would feel “worried” with Trump as a president – with 49 percent he says “firmly”. Only 29 percent said they felt comfortable with him.
On the other hand, 51 percent said that he would feel concerned about Clinton in an oval office, and 47 percent claims that it would be comfortable.
Meanwhile, the survey after displaying a powerful opposition to the ban on Muslims proposed by Trump who are not US citizens in our country.
Only 36 percent of all Americans said that it would ask such a ban, and 60 percent said it was “inappropriate”.
(*23*) oppose such a ban by 82 to 15 percent, while the independent people opposed it by 58 to 38 percent.
Republicans, however, support Trump’s ban by 59 to 38 percent.
Republicans trust him on a wide margin of all his political competitors GOP – by 50 percent or more – asked who can better deal with terrorism, immigration, introduce the necessary changes in Washington and exert powerful leadership.
The weakest results of Trump (23 percent) concerned “the most honest and trustworthy” – the result of making statements that proved to be false – and “the best personality”, the result of offensive comments addressed to women and other candidates at GOP Race Race.
Trump leads among every Republican demographic and ideological group, but men were much more likely to support him than women – a sign of Clinton’s strength and Trump’s weakness with a key voting block.
While most Americans oppose the ban on Trump, it is clear that terrorism has become the biggest problem among voters from terrorist attacks in San Bernardino, California and Paris.
After seven years of surveys, when the economy and workplaces were seen as the main issues mentioned by voters, the political area has changed dramatically into GOP.
Now 38 percent of Republicans mentions the terrorist threat compared to 29 percent, who indicate the economy and 6 percent distinguish immigration.
In particular, (*23*) assess the economy as the most essential issue before the country-warning to Clinton, which will be forced to defend Obama’s forever anemic economy in next year’s elections.
However, when voters seem to reject candidates for GOP establishment, the probe suggests differently.
It turned out that 57 percent of adults stated that they prefer a candidate with political experience, and only 37 percent said that he wanted to put from the outside in the White House.
But among the Republicans, 58 percent stated that he wants from outside, not anyone with government experience. Trump was a superior choice in this group.
However, three candidates who had experience in the main state governors who were at the bottom of the election nests did not give up – anticipating that their fortune would reverse.
Ohio Governor John Kasich placed it in the face of CBS The Nation:
“Finally, people say:” Who can land on the plane and who has this experience? “They are frustrated.
New Jersey Governor Chris Christie, leading the New Hampshire campaign at the weekend, said: “Time to make us serious.”
“You don’t want someone to sit in [Oval Office] The chairman, spinning around: “Oh, isn’t it great to be president?” – he said. “You want someone who … Understanding from the first minute who sits in this chair, that it is a stern matter.”
Former Governor Florida JEB Bush has been fighting the same topic for months.
During a speech in the town hall in Hookett, NH, Bush said that eventually voters will say: “I want someone who can do, who can do a job, which I can look at the past and have some sense going forward, that he has the right things, that he can take on The right decisions that he is a serious person. “
Perhaps none of this sounds as stimulating as when Senator Texas Ted Cruz, a first -year student, said that the response to the war with terrorism was “bombarding of carpets” of bad guys hiding in civilian cities.
Before he became the governor, Christie was challenging as a federal prosecutor of the nail, who began behind the bars of republican and democrats curves.
And the only candidates who conducted terrorist investigations on the basis of the Patriot act, Fisa Court, interacting with foreign officials in terrorist matters.
“Nobody else did it on this scene,” he said.
Many times come a presidential candidate who can give a great speech, but he knows absolutely nothing about the government machine, its regulations, the Tax Code and how to cope through the controversial thickets of 535 men and women on the Capitol to break the gridlock legislative legislation.
Experience still matters, and lack of experience can harm our country … bad. We experienced both.
There were Ike and Reagan, and then Jimmy Carter and Obama. Choose wisely.