Source: REUTERS
Democratic
presidential hopeful Hillary Clinton's lead over Republican Donald
Trump has dipped into the single digits among likely U.S. voters for the
first time in nearly two weeks, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll
released on Friday.
The June
27-July 1 poll showed a 9.4 percentage point lead for the former
secretary of state over the New York businessman, down slightly from an
11.2 point lead in a previous five-day poll that ended on June 28.Clinton had maintained a double-digit lead in the rolling poll since June 20, as she recovered from a brief boost in Trump's numbers in the wake of the mass shooting in Orlando, Florida, when he renewed a call for a ban on Muslim immigration.
Among likely voters, 43.9 percent now support Clinton, compared with 34.5 percent for Trump. Another 21.7 percent of likely voters wouldn't support either candidate.
Clinton is more popular among men and women, young people and minorities, college graduates, and people who live on incomes that are both lower and higher than the national average. Trump has an edge among whites, people with lower levels of education, older Americans and retirees, and he leads among people who frequently attend church.
Overall, voters have increasingly sided with Clinton since mid-May, when the two were about even in the poll.
Trump
is expected officially to become the Republican presidential nominee
when the party holds its convention in another 2-1/2 weeks. Clinton is
expected to become the Democratic nominee when the Democrats hold their
convention a week later.
The
poll, which included responses from 1,080 likely voters, has a
credibility interval, a measure of accuracy, of 3.5 percentage points.
Clinton's
lead had widened to as much as 14 percentage points in the past two
weeks as Republican leaders criticized Trump for his opposition to
international trade agreements and a string of nativist comments about
Hipsanics and Muslims.
Clinton's
campaign, meanwhile, has been dogged by allegations that she mishandled
classified emails and failed to protect U.S. diplomats in Libya while
secretary of state in Obama’s first administration. She denies
wrongdoing.
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