Did Someone Leak the Debate Questions to Kamala Harris?
How JD Vance Responded to the Media's Meltdown Over the Haitians Eating Pets...
Notice Anything Wrong About This Sentence From NY Mag Writer About the ABC...
Well, That Debate Happened…
Trump Won The Debate Because Kamala Lost
Why Is 'Project 2025' So Vilified by Both Political Parties?
Harris Campaign Posts Debate as 'New Ad' But Omits Key Portion
UPenn Makes Major Announcement About How It Will Avoid Controversies Going Forward
Debate: Trump Missed Opportunities -- but It Was 3 Against 1
Steph Curry, Abortion, and the Woke NBA
Spin Doctors Claim Harris Won the Debate. Why, Then, Is She Asking for...
The Tortilla That May Save the World
After Nearly 80 Years, Israel Has Still Not Really Been Accepted
GOP: Grand Old Patsies
Walz Pushes Wasteful Taxpayer-Funded Broadband in Minnesota
Tipsheet

Bloomberg: Trump Has 'Erased' Hillary's Advantage By Debate Day

We've reached debate day in the 2016 presidential election and a new Bloomberg national survey shows that Donald Trump has caught up to his opponent.

The Republican and Democratic nominees each get 46 percent of likely voters in a head-to-head contest in the latest Bloomberg Politics national poll, while Trump gets 43 percent to Clinton’s 41 percent when third-party candidates are included.

Advertisement

These new numbers "erase" the 6-point advantage Clinton had last month, Bloomberg notes.

Clinton's email scandal and health may have something to do with her struggling poll numbers. The image of her stumbling off the curb at the 9/11 memorial are still fresh in voters' minds and pundits have questioned whether she can "power through" all 90 minutes of Monday's debate, commercial break-free.

Still, with these question marks, the Bloomberg survey also showed that 49 percent of voters think she'll perform better than the GOP nominee.

The Clinton campaign is not happy with the fact that Trump is likely to be "graded on a curve" and given passing marks just for managing to not say something outlandish.

The presidential debate will air on CNN at 9 p.m. ET live from New York's Hofstra University and will be moderated by Lester Holt.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement