Press. voanews.com.
political
surveys are showing that Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton has
regained her edge over Republican contender Donald Trump in the aftermath of
last week's Democratic convention where she and a raft of other speakers
attacked his credentials to be the American leader.
Trump, a real
estate tycoon seeking elected office for the first time, enjoyed a similar bump
in polling against Clinton, a former U.S. secretary of state, after the
Republican convention two weeks ago with its barrage of taunts against her.
But now that
both of the quadrennial conventions are over, CBS News said Clinton leads Trump
46 percent to 39, similar to her 43-37 lead in mid-June. The television
network's poll in the days after Trump claimed the Republican nomination more
than a week ago showed the race tied at 42 apiece.
CBS also said
its latest survey shows that voters continue to hold unfavorable views of both
Clinton and Trump, although both of their standings were somewhat improved
after their respective conventions. Voters now hold a 36 percent to 50 percent
favorable-unfavorable view of Clinton, while Trump is at 31-52.
A CNN-ORC poll released
later Monday had Clinton holding an even larger lead of 52 percent to 43
percent following the Democratic National Convention. The television network's
poll after the Republican convention had Trump ahead 48-45.
The CNN poll
also found that Clinton's convention appears to have raised the percentage of
Americans who think her policies will move the country in the right direction -
from 43 percent before either convention
to 48 percent now.
In another
post-conventions survey, Public Policy Polling showed a 46-41 Clinton lead in
polling that included two other presidential candidates, Libertarian Gary
Johnson, with 6 percent support, and the Green Party's Jill Stein at 2 percent.
"It looks
like the Republican and Democratic convention bounces have cancelled each other
out and basically left the race where it was a month ago,” said Dean Debnam,
Public Policy Polling's president.
A third
pollster, Gallup, said Americans are almost evenly divided on how they view
Clinton's Democratic Party after its convention, with 44 percent feeling
favorably about it and 42 percent less favorably.
But Gallup said
a separate survey taken in the immediate aftermath of the Republican convention
showed that only 35 percent of Americans had a more favorable view of the party,
compared to 52 percent viewing it less favorably.
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