Admittedly, these surveys were conducted in the field before Hillary Clinton’s groundbreaking displays of planned spontaneity on SNL and Today’s program — and before its first national television advertisement appeared. About this ad. New
Red State editor-in-chief creates compelling case that its concept is counterproductive and the content is poorly developed. Plus advertising on air exactly it wasn’t Silver bullet for Team Clinton:
Since July, Hillary’s has spent millions on TV in IA and NH. Her average favorability ratings (-23.5) in these states… http://t.co/jBslV7N04f
— Guy Benson (@guypbenson) October 5, 2015
NBC is trailing various Republicans in these two states, according to the latest poll, and here’s more bad news for Double-digit result for Democrats leader Quinnipiac Streetwhich polled voters in three additional battleground states:
Florida: Favorability (44/51), credibility (35/59). Clinton is statistically connected to Marco Rubio (-1), Jeb Bush (-1), Carly Fiorina (+2), and Ben Carson (+2). He leads Donald Trump by five points.
Ohio: Favorability (38/56), credibility (33/61). Clinton lags behind all Republicans polled except Trump. He trails Carson by nine, Rubio by four, and Bush and Fiorina by two.
Pennsylvania: Favorability (41/54), credibility (34/61). Match-ups present the same offer as Ohio. Hillary faces every potential GOP rival except Donald Trump. Carson (-9), Bush (-6), Fiorina (-4), Rubio (-3).
Poll shows Bernie Sanders also facing hypothetical Republican opponents; undeclared candidate Joe Biden emerges as the strongest Democrat in these head-to-head matchups. Clinton allies are reportedly considering the possibility surrendering in New Hampshirethe state that renewed its efforts against Barack Obama in 2008 and who is its main leader fell sharply at True Blue in California. Nevertheless, even with disturbing fresh wrinkles in an email scandal that continues to emerge every day, Mrs. Clinton leads her party’s primary field by more than 16 percentage points average RCP – has fallen sharply from the 50-point lead it had in the spring, but still maintains a significant lead. I’ll leave you with some thoughts from Democratic voters in New Hampshire:

