The results of the GOP debate couldn’t have been more clear.
Cementing his already strong position as Republican frontrunner, Donald Trump gave a powerful debate performance that voters will likely remember into next year’s election. Although the Donald made a few stumbles, his overall presentation was one of confidence and capability.
As expected however, moderators and others (including members of the audience), were waiting the entire debate for an opportunity to pounce on the candidate and his statements. At one point, audience members even booed his plan to infiltrate ISIS conversations on the Internet. Unsurprisingly, Trump wasn’t having it.
“I just can’t imagine somebody booing. These are people who want to kill us, folks, and you’re objecting to us infiltrating their conversations? I don’t think so,” he responded incredulously.
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Mike Pulos yeah like Mexico is going to pay for it. And how do you ban ideology that people can lie about?
Trump 2016
Trump 2016!!!
Trump needs to get at least 50% in a state for popular vote otherwise the electoral votes can go to say Jeb Bush that’s why all the bottom feeders are hanging on.
Jeb Bush says Trump will never be President.
I can remember the last 3 times and I’m young.
Trump ’em Donald
Donald “The Truth” Trump
Say it like it is Donald
I have 3 words for Trump Man Bully: John Wilkes Booth
the polls are fabricated. trump is psycho
Doesn’t matter, Hillary will beat either one of them in the General Election.
At this point in the campaign, Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton would beat Ted Cruz and Donald Trump in head-to-head matchups in the general election, but a new Wall Street Journal-NBC poll finds that she would not win against Marco Rubio or Ben Carson.
Donald Trump back on top, with Ted Cruz climbing into second
Hillary Clinton leads Democratic field
Clinton currently leads the Democratic primary field by about 20 points, and this poll indicates she is more attractive to independent voters than Trump is, but Cruz, Rubio and Carson would pick up more independent support than she would in the general election.
Her margin against Trump would be 50 percent to his 40 percent. Forty-three percent of independent voters would support Clinton, while 36 percent would give their support to Trump. Sixty-nine percent of Hispanics would choose Clinton, compared to 24 percent for Trump.