Trump's
lead grows as Bush slips in Republican White House race: Reuters poll
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[August 26, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Republican
Jeb Bush's support is slipping in the race for the party's presidential
nomination, and front-runner Donald Trump has opened a 20-point lead
over his closest rivals, a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll showed on Tuesday.
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Republican backing for Bush dipped from 16 percent to 8 percent in
the last five days, the online poll found, as the former Florida
governor feuded with Trump over immigration policy and defended his
use of the term "anchor babies" to describe U.S.-born children of
illegal immigrants.
Trump's support remained largely unchanged over the last week at
about 30 percent, well ahead of the 17-strong pack seeking to
represent the Republican Party in the November 2016 presidential
election.
Bush fell into a third-place tie with retired neurosurgeon Ben
Carson in the poll, and former Arkansas Governor Mike Huckabee moved
into second place with 10 percent.
Bush's dip came as he battled Trump over immigration in recent days,
calling the real estate mogul's hard-line plan to deport
undocumented immigrants and construct a wall on the Mexican border
costly and unrealistic.
Bush also was forced to defend his use of the term "anchor babies,"
which some consider offensive, in a radio interview last week. Trump
gleefully punched back with tweets that called Bush's efforts to
explain himself "clumsy" and "a mess."
"Bush's numbers have been trending down, generally, and he has just
been overshadowed by Trump," said Ipsos pollster Chris Jackson. "His
argument that he will be the establishment's guy in the race is
looking less and less convincing."
Trump's continued appeal has confounded the Republican
establishment, which has been anxiously waiting for the party's
primary voters to grow weary of his style.
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Instead, Trump's support in the poll has largely held steady or
grown, fueled by his image as a maverick who speaks his mind and
stands up to authority.
The poll found about 77 percent of Republicans said Trump is
appealing because he is not interested in being "politically
correct," and about the same number said he is appealing because he
confronts the media. About 68 percent said he was appealing because
his personal fortune meant he was not indebted to donors.
Big majorities of Republicans now say Trump's participation in the
party's presidential debates will challenge the establishment and
open the party to new ideas.
The results in Tuesday's rolling poll are based on 511 Republicans
and have a credibility interval of plus or minus 5 percent.
(Reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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