This Article is From Oct 27, 2016

Race To The White House: New Polls Send Mixed Signals

Race To The White House: New Polls Send Mixed Signals

The Reuters/Ipsos poll gives Hillary Clinton a lead of four points over Donald Trump.

Washington: A new round of US election polls appear to send mixed signals about the state of the race to the White House, with one showing less than a one-point gap between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, while another puts the Democrat a massive 14 points above her Republican rival.

The IBD/TIPP poll, which is said to have made the most accurate prediction in the 2012 elections, said that Mr Trump (41.2 per cent) is trailing by just 0.6 points against Ms Clinton (41.8 per cent).

On the other hand, a new AP-Gfk poll gives Ms Clinton a commanding lead of 14 percentage points. Ms Clinton has the support of 51 per cent of likely voters, while Mr Trump is favoured by 37 per cent. The poll, conducted between 1,546 adults including 1,212 likely voters, gives the greatest lead for Ms Clinton among all major national polls.

Fox News in its latest poll said the race to the White House has narrowed with less than two weeks for the November 8 general elections. Ms Clinton (44 per cent) has a three-point lead over Trump (41 per cent). Last week she was up by six points (45-39 per cent) and before that by seven (45-38 per cent).

In a poll carried out by US Today/Suffolk University, Ms Clinton with 47 per cent leads Mr Trump by nine percentage points. It was carried among 1,000 likely voters from October 20 to 24.

The Reuters/Ipsos poll gives Ms Clinton a lead of four points over Mr Trump.

Los Angeles Times/USC tracking is the only poll that puts Trump ahead, albeit by a narrow single point margin.

As per RealClearPolitics, which keeps track of all major national polls, Ms Clinton's lead over Mr Trump has now come down to 5.4 percentage points in an average of polls, which was nearly nine percentage points over a week ago. In the Huffington Post average of polls Mr Trump is trailing Ms Clinton by six percentage points.
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