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		Trump? Clinton? Many young Americans 
		prefer giant meteor, poll finds 
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		 [October 19, 2016] 
		By Scott Malone 
 BOSTON (Reuters) - Young Americans are so 
		dissatisfied with their choices in this presidential election that 
		nearly one in four told an opinion poll they would rather have a giant 
		meteor destroy the Earth than see Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton in the 
		White House.
 
 The tongue-in-cheek question was intended to gauge young Americans' 
		level of unhappiness about their choices in the Nov. 8 election, said 
		Joshua Dyck, co-director of UMass Lowell’s Center for Public Opinion, 
		which conducted the poll alongside Odyssey Millennials.
 
 The choice alluded to the Twitter hashtag "#GiantMeteor2016," a 
		reference to an imaginary presidential candidate used to express 
		frustration about this year's election choices.
 
 Some 53 percent of the 1,247 people aged 18 to 35 said they would prefer 
		to see a meteor destroy the world than have Republican New York real 
		estate developer Trump in the Oval Office, with some 34 percent 
		preferring planetary annihilation to seeing the Democratic former 
		Secretary of State win.
 
		
		 
		Some 39 percent said they would prefer that U.S. President Barack Obama 
		declare himself president for life than hand over power to Clinton or 
		Trump, with 26 percent saying the nation would do better to select its 
		next leader in a random lottery.
 Some 23 percent, nearly one in four, preferred the giant meteor outcome 
		to either Trump or Clinton.
 
 "Obviously we don't think that they're serious," Dyck said in a phone 
		interview on Tuesday. "The fact that one in four of our young people 
		pick 'Giant Meteor' tells you something about the political disaffection 
		that is being shown by American youth."
 
 That contrasts with the surge of participation by young voters that 
		helped propel Obama into the White House for his first term in the 2008 
		election.
 
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			Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton during their presidential town hall 
			debate in St. Louis. REUTERS/Jim Young 
            
			 
			When asked to choose between the actual candidates, Clinton easily 
			led Trump with 54 percent of respondents to 21 percent in a two-way 
			race.
 In a four-way race also including Libertarian Gary Johnson and Green 
			Party candidate Jill Stein, Clinton led with 48 percent support, to 
			Trump's 20 percent, Johnson's 10 percent and Stein's 4 percent.
 
 In national polls surveying the whole population, Clinton is leading 
			Trump, but not by nearly as much.
 
 The poll, conducted Oct. 10-13, intentionally included a large 
			number of people seen as unlikely to vote, with just 680 described 
			as likely voters. It had a margin of error of 3.2 percent.
 
			(Reporting by Scott Malone; Additional reporting by Amy Tennery in 
			New York; Editing by Frances Kerry) 
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