Clinton leads Trump 48-43 percent in Washington Post-ABC tracking poll

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton holds a five-point lead over Republican Donald Trump in the latest Washington Post-ABC Tracking Poll released early on Sunday.


In the Post-ABC poll released on Friday, Clinton led Trump by 47 percent to 44 percent.
Clinton had an advantage in affirmative support, the poll said, with 55 percent of backers saying they are mainly supporting her, compared with 43 percent of Trump voters. More Trump voters say they “mainly oppose Clinton.”Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are sprinting across the country, doubling back to key battleground states that have become more competitive in the final two days of the presidential campaign.
Trump has new targets in his sights in historically Democratic states such as Michigan, New Mexico and Minnesota, where recent polls have shown some tightening.
On Sunday, the Republican nominee’s campaign pointed to Clinton’s scramble to shore up states like Michigan as a sign of momentum.
“Donald Trump is closing, and he’s got the momentum going into Tuesday,” Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus said on ABC News. “We believe a Pennsylvania, a Michigan, a Wisconsin could quickly move onto our board.”Once thought to be safe for Democrats, Michigan has become a last-minute battleground, with Clinton heading to Grand Rapids on Monday, the campaign announced this weekend. President Obama, who won Michigan twice, will campaign in Ann Arbor on Monday. And former president Bill Clinton will make a stop in Lansing on Sunday.
Clinton campaigned in Philadelphia on Sunday after attending a get-out-the-vote concert in the city on Saturday night. And she will return to the state for two rallies on the eve of Election Day, a sign that the Keystone State is among the battlegrounds where her lead over Trump has dwindled in recent days.
A top Clinton aide said Sunday that the race is effectively over and that the campaign believes Clinton will hold on to blue, upper Midwestern states such as Minnesota, Michigan and Wisconsin.
“We feel like we got a lead in Michigan,” Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta said Sunday morning on NBC’s “Meet the Press.” He added, “We want to hold on to it, and we think we can do that.”
“We think we have this race over. We’re going to get over our 270 electoral votes,” he added on ABC News’ “This Week.”
Trump will return to Northern Virginia on Sunday night as Republicans see new hope in a state where Clinton has long held a comfortable lead. And for the second time in less than 48 hours, Clinton will return to Ohio, which has consistently been one of Trump’s strongest battlegrounds, to hold a rally with basketball star and Cleveland’s hometown hero LeBron James.
At Mount Airy Church of God in Christ in Philadelphia on Sunday morning, Clinton swayed to a gospel serenade from singer BeBe Winans and delivered a version of her stump speech that sounded more like a sermon.“On Tuesday we face a test of our own,” she told the predominantly African American congregation. “This election is about much more than two candidates. Everything you care about, everything I care about, is at stake.”
Clinton noted that there is no early voting in Pennsylvania and urged strong turnout on Tuesday, despite what she said are forces trying to suppress or deter voting.
“We cannot get this wrong. The stakes are too high,” she said.
Trump started his five-state swing in Sioux City in eastern Iowa, close to the Nebraska border. Ahead of his arrival, an Iowa campaign staffer asked how many in the crowd were from Nebraska, and there was a roar. Nebraska is one of two states that can split its electoral votes between candidates, and in 2008, one electoral vote from the Omaha area went to Obama.
Trump was joined by three of Iowa’s top Republicans: Gov. Terry Branstad, Sen. Joni Ernst and Rep. Steve King.
The Republican nominee continued to suggest that Clinton could face criminal charges related to the ongoing investigation into her use of a private email server while at the State Department.
“If she were to win, it would create an unprecedented constitutional crisis” because Clinton might be indicted, Trump said. “We have one chance, it’s our last chance.”
At a rally on Saturday night in Reno, Nev., Trump was rushed offstage as security officials swarmed, but the candidate re-emerged after a few minutes and finished his speech.
The U.S. Secret Service later said in a statement that it took action after “an unidentified individual shouted ‘gun’ ” in front of the stage. Agents apprehended the person but found no gun, the statement said, adding that an investigation into the incident continues.
Trump concluded his rally without further incident.
The GOP nominee later released a statement thanking the Secret Service and local law enforcement for their “fast and professional response,” adding that “nothing will stop us — we will make America great again!”
In the aftermath of the event’s disruption, Trump campaign aides and the candidate’s son Donald Trump Jr. retweeted a supporter who credited Trump for returning to the stage after an “assassination attempt” and noted that Clinton had cut an event short earlier Saturday in Florida because of rain.
Asked about the younger Trump’s claim that his father had experienced an “assassination attempt, Trump’s campaign manager called the protester a “Democratic plant” and said the incident had understandably shaken the Trump family.
“If you’re Don Jr. and you’re on a live TV set while you’re watching this unfold, it’s pretty rattling to think of what may have happened to your father,” Kellyanne Conway said on CNN’s “State of the Union.” “So, I will excuse him that.”
Meanwhile, a bus carrying reporters covering Democratic vice-presidential nominee Tim Kaine’s stops in Florida was hit at high speed, according to reporters traveling with the senator. There were no reports of injuries. Kaine was several cars ahead of the bus, according to reporters in his motorcade.
Meanwhile, the Clinton campaign continues to use its huge financial advantage over Trump to press its case to swing voters on the airwaves.
The campaign on Sunday released two national ads appealing to moderate and Republican voters to reject Trump and embrace Clinton. Both ads, “Respected” and “Last Straw,” feature straight-to-camera testimonials from Republican military veterans who say they cannot vote for their party’s nominee, citing Trump’s comments about women. Another two-minute ad will air Monday night during top-rated network broadcasts, aimed at reaching about 20 million people, according to a campaign aide.
Trump also released a closing campaign ad, a two-minute spot tying Clinton to the “failed and corrupt political establishment” and “global special interests.” But the ad, which features images of piles of cash along with Jewish corporate and financial leaders, including Goldman Sachs CEO Lloyd Blankfein and Federal Reserve Chair Janet L. Yellen, was sharply criticized by the Anti-Defamation League for what it called anti-Semitic overtones.
“Whether intentional or not, the images and rhetoric in this ad touch on subjects that anti-Semites have used for ages,” ADL CEO Jonathan Greenblatt said. “This needs to stop.”
Clinton will rally in Manchester, N.H., on Sunday with Khizr Khan. Khan is the father of fallen soldier Capt. Humayun Khan, whose challenge to Trump over the Republican’s proposed ban on Muslim immigration was among the most memorable moments of the Democratic National Convention.
Nationally, Clinton leads Trump 48 percent to 43 percent among likely voters, according to the most recent Washington Post-ABC News tracking poll Clinton is up 43 percent to 41 percent. In Arizona, Trump leads by three points (46-43). Clinton is ahead by six points in New Mexico (40-34) and five points in North Carolina (48-43), Pennsylvania (47-42) and Wisconsin (45-40). She’s up by four points in Virginia (45-41).
Trump holds a five-point lead in Ohio (46-41), where Clinton held a star-studded campaign rally on Friday night with rapper Jay-Z and Beyoncé, his wife.
The race remains ticktock tight in Nevada, where the candidates are tied at 44 percent each. In Florida, Clinton has a 47-to-46-percent advantage. Trump leads in Georgia (47-45), Iowa (46-41), and Utah (35-28), where third-party candidate Evan McMullin has been polling well.
Poll averages calculated by The Post for Clinton and Trump reflect recent polls that also include McMullin, Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein where they are on the ballot and where results are available.
Previous Post Next Post