Clinton enjoys 51 percent of support among Americans, up by
seven points from May, compared to Trump’s support at 39 percent, which is down
by seven points, according to the Washington Post-ABC News poll.
The poll discovered
that 56 percent of American voters believe Trump stands against their beliefs,
while 64 percent say Trump does not have the necessary credentials to be
president.
Clinton’s lead over
Trump narrows to 10 points by 47 per cent to 37 per cent, when the two
third-party presidential candidates were mentioned in the poll.
Libertarian Party’s
Gary Johnson gains 7 percent of support, while Green Party’s Jill Stein garners
only 3 percent, according to the poll.
The controversial comments
on women, minorities and Muslims made by Trump, a brash New York billionaire,
may have contributed to his recent slide in the poll, as the majority of
American voters regard them as biased.
Overall, 66 percent
of Americans think Trump’s remarks as “unfairly biased,” while only 29 percent
say they are “not unfairly biased.”
Even among the
Republicans, 41 percent think Trump’s remarks are “unfairly biased,” while 53
percent say they are “not unfairly biased.”
Trump has been
criticized recently by publicly attacking a Mexcian-American judge overseeing
the Trump University fraud case.
The poll found that
68 percent of Americans regard Trump’ s criticism of Judge Gonzalo Curiel as
racist and 85 percent say they are inappropriate.
U.S. Democrat
candidate Bernie Sanders said on Friday that he will vote for the party’s
presumptive presidential nominee Hillary Clinton in November, saying stopping
Donald Trump from becoming president must be an overarching goal.
Earlier U.S.
President Barack Obama formally threw his support behind presumptive Democratic
presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in a report on Thursday.
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