You Can’t Out-MAGA Donald Trump
Democrats and the Stench of Desperation
Everyone's in on It
Intersectionality and Abandoned Leadership Is Killing the Democrats
Accountability, the New Political Buzzword
Stop the Harmful Time-Changing Ritual
Kitchen-Table Politics: Why Prescription Drug Costs Could Decide the Midterms
Man Arrested for Allegedly Stealing Veteran’s Identity and Using VA Health Care for...
Seventh U.S. Service Member Killed in Operation Epic Fury
NYPD Investigates Suspicious Device in Manhattan Vehicle After Apparent Terror Plot
NYPD Confirms Real IED Thrown at Protest Crowd
Federal Judge Voids Voice of America Layoffs
Trump Says He Won't Sign Any New Legislation Until the SAVE Act Is...
Former Carlyle Police Chief Accused of Spending Taxpayer Monday on WNBA Tickets, Jewelry
Chicago-Area Convenience Store Owner Sentenced to 4 Years in WIC Fraud Scheme
Tipsheet

Poll: Vast Majority of GOP Voters Want Leaders to Stick By Trump

Poll: Vast Majority of GOP Voters Want Leaders to Stick By Trump

As GOP leaders continue to pull their endorsements in droves for presidential nominee Donald Trump after video surfaced late last week showing the business man saying men should "grab women by the p*ssy," a new poll sanctioned by POLITICO shows the majority of GOP voters want the Party stick by their man. 

Advertisement
A wave of Republican officials abandoned Donald Trump on Saturday, but, at least for now, rank-and-file Republicans are standing by the party's presidential candidate, according to a new POLITICO/Morning Consult poll conducted immediately after audio was unearthed Friday that had the GOP nominee crudely bragging about groping women and trying to lure a married woman into an affair.

Overall, fewer than four-in-10 voters -- 39 percent -- think Trump should end his presidential campaign, while only slightly more voters, 45 percent, think he should not drop out.

As of now, GOP voters largely want the party to stand behind Trump. Nearly three-quarters of Republican voters, 74 percent, surveyed on Saturday said party officials should continue to support Trump. Only 13 percent think the party shouldn’t back him.

The comments don't appear to be affecting the general electorate, at least not yet. 

Prominent Republicans John McCain and Speaker Paul Ryan officially pulled their support yesterday in addition to dozens more elected officials around the country, including a number of Republican governors.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement