
oqtz McCain Talks Economy in S.C.
|
|
Jeaonenut |
Dodany dnia 04-12-2024 08:34
|
U¿ytkownik Postów: 1389 Data rejestracji: 06.09.24 |
Muix U.S. sanctions Israeli group for damaging humanitarian aid to Palestinian civilians Even if front-runners Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump pick up victories in Tuesday night s East Coast primaries and increase their delegate leads, both candidates would face challenges in uniting their respective parties in the general election, a new poll found.Regardless of Northeast primary outcomes, Sanders still in this race to win The survey, out Tuesday from USA Today/Suffolk, found that four in 10 Republicans said they aren t sure they d vote for Trump if he s the GOP nominee, and instead might vote for the Democrat, a third-party candidate or maybe not vote at all. Among Democrats, the figures are similar: four in 10 Sanders supporters say they aren t su stanley mugs re they d vote for Clinton.The race to 1237: Four states crazy GOP delegate rulesIt s likely some of those voters could change their minds once the nominee is in place: many Clinton supporters in 2008, for example, vowed they wouldn t vote for President Obama in the general election but ended up supporting him when the time came. But the poll underscores how deep some of the divisions are in this year s contests. Why Trump seems pleased with the Cruz-Kasich alliance 02:44 In the Democratic primary stanley cups , Clinton leads Sanders by 5 points, stanley cup 50 percent to 45 percent 5 percent are undecided. That lead has narrowed from 10 points in February, when Fejb Free speech rally in Boston draws counter-protesters As President Bush heads into his second term, a CBS News/New York Times poll finds a widespread feeling stanley thermobecher among Americans that the nation is headed in the wrong direction and little expectation that Mr. Bush s policies will change things over the next four years.Fifty-eight percent of Americans say their outlook on a second Bush term is generally optimistic ndash; a low number when compared to Mr. Bush s approval rating before his first term stanley cup or Bill Clinton s before his second. At the same time, 56 percent say the country is on the wrong track, versus 39 percent who say it is on the right track.Looking four years down the line, most Americans see very little changing, despite the ambitious agenda Mr. Bush is laying out for his second term. Most expect they will be as safe from terror at the end of a second Bush term as they are today, but not safer. They think the economy and education system will be the same, but not better.Despite Mr. Bush s focus on tax cuts, 41 percent of Americans sa stanley cup y their taxes will be higher in four years, while just 9 percent say their taxes will be lower; 47 percent expect their taxes to be the same. While Mr. Bush has a stated goal of cutting the national deficit in half, two-thirds of Americans expect the deficit to be higher after four years. A slight plurality of Americans, 38 percent, say there will be fewer U.S. troops in Iraq by the end of a second Bush term. But 30 percent say there will be mor https://www.stanley-cups.ca |
Przeskocz do forum: |