Democrat
Sanders gaining on front-runner Clinton in 2016 presidential race: poll
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[September 12, 2015]
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Vermont
Senator Bernie Sanders is gaining fast on front-runner Hillary Clinton
in the Democratic presidential race and has moved within single digits
of her for the first time, a Reuters/Ipsos opinion poll showed on
Friday.
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Clinton leads Sanders nationally among Democrats by eight
percentage points, 39 percent to 31 percent, her smallest cushion
since the nominating battle began for the November 2016 election.
She led Sanders by 20 percentage points in the online poll a week
ago. (Reuters/Ipsos poll: http://bit.ly/1L6Tpwu)
Clinton's support among Democrats has steadily eroded for weeks amid
questions about her use of a private email server while she was
secretary of state. Her support was at 45 percent one week ago.
Clinton apologized for the email practice earlier this week, but the
controversy has helped knock her support among Democrats to its
lowest level since Reuters/Ipsos began polling on the 2016 election
almost three years ago.
Sanders has galvanized the party's left-leaning activists and
primary voters and taken advantage of what other polls show are
Clinton's declining ratings on honesty and trustworthiness to surge
into contention. He was at 25 percent support in the rolling,
five-day Reuters/Ipsos poll a week ago.
Other public opinion polls show Sanders moving into the lead or tied
with Clinton in Iowa and New Hampshire, the states that kick off the
nominating contest.
Clinton's troubles also have given rise to a possible late entry
from Vice President Joe Biden, who says he is evaluating whether he
and his family have the energy and commitment for a presidential
race after the recent death of his son Beau.
Biden is in third place at 16 percent in the Reuters/Ipsos poll,
about where he was a week ago.
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John Myers, a South Carolina Democrat who participated in the
survey, said he is tentatively backing Biden to represent the party
in the November 2016 election but there are too many unanswered
questions to be sure.
"I'm really kind of up in the air," Myers said. "I want to see what
Biden does, and I want to see where this goes with the Clinton email
situation."
The Reuters/Ipsos poll surveyed 668 Democrats Sept. 7-11 and had a
credibility interval of 4.4 percentage points.
For more on the 2016 presidential race, see the Reuters blog, “Tales
from the Trail” (http://blogs.reuters.com/talesfromthetrail/).
(Reporting by John Whitesides; Editing by Lisa Shumaker)
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