US Democratic presidential
nominee Hillary Clinton has taken a 12-percentage-point lead over her
Republican rival, Donald Trump, in the run-up to the 2016 US
presidential race, according to a new poll.
The Reuters/Ipsos
poll, released on Tuesday, shows the former secretary of state has 45
percent of the votes as compared to the New York billionaire having only
a 33-percent support. Another 22 percent wouldn't pick either
candidate.
Clinton has led Trump throughout most of the 2016
presidential campaign. But her latest lead represents a stronger level
of support than polls showed in recent editions of the poll.
In
the previous polls, the former First Lady’s lead over the real estate
tycoon ranged between 3 and 9. One poll -- McClatchy/Marist survey –
conducted early August, however, found Clinton 15 points ahead of Trump.
Clinton's
lead over Trump slimmed slightly in the Reuters/Ipsos poll in a
four-way match-up that included Libertarian nominee Gary Johnson and
Green Party nominee Jill Stein. She received 41 percent to his 33
percent. In that scenario, Johnson earned 7 percent, while Stein bagged 2
percent.
The poll was conducted from August 18 to 22 among a national sample of 1,115 likely voters. The margin of error is 3 points. US
Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump addresses supporters at
the James A. Rhodes Arena on August 22, 2016 in Akron, Ohio. (AFP photo)The
Reuters poll noted that at this point of the race four years ago,
public support for candidates was higher during the presidential
election between Democratic President Barack Obama and Republican Mitt
Romney.
"Those who are wavering right now are just as likely to be
thinking about supporting a third-party candidate instead, and not
between Clinton and Trump," said Tom Smith, who directs the Center for
the Study of Politics and Society at the University of Chicago.
According
to Pew Research Center poll, released last week, a majority of
Americans hold an unfavorable view of Trump, with 55 percent saying he
would make a poor or terrible president, while 45 percent saying the
same about Clinton.
Thirty-one percent say Clinton would make a good or great president, while 27 percent say the same of Trump.
Those
who back Trump say, 81 percent to 11 percent, that life is worse now
for US citizens than it was 50 years ago. However, Clinton supporters --
59 percent -- say life is better than five decades ago and 19 percent
say it is worse.
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