here we are just one day away…. wow guys what a journey…. this is not the end of it… but a beginning of 8 years of bringing this country together…. mis hermanos latinos, no más sentirse inferiores…. ¡somos Estado Unidenses! poor, rich, educated, mothers, vets…. TODOS!
we will make these last 8 years ans next ones the Golden Age of Our Country
my Hillary Swag
oh well…. #HusbandSwag
Yesterday I posted final Latino Decision's weekly tracking poll…. here is the two graphs that matter
TODAY
NBC/SM +6
Over the course of months of NBC News|SurveyMonkey polling, the numbers have remained remarkably stable. Clinton has not only maintained a lead over the Republican nominee since the end of July, but the margin of her lead has been between 4 to 6 percentage points since the second week of September.
Final Bloomberg Poll +3
More than a third of likely voters, 37 percent, say they’ve already voted and Clinton is leading Trump with that group, 46 percent to 38 percent.
WaPo/ABC +4
Clinton has held an advantage among early voters throughout most of the past two weeks, suggesting that she has banked a significant amount of votes among a group that makes up one-third of the likely voter electorate. In data collected over the past three nights, Clinton leads 55 percent to 39 percent among early voters, although the margin was slimmed to 10 points in the last day of interviewing.
CBS News +4
The demographic profile of the race is virtually unchanged from last week. The gender gap remains: Trump leads among men, while Clinton has a double-digit advantage among women.
White voters are backing Trump, particularly white men and whites without a college degree. The race is close among white women, and Clinton has an edge among white college graduates. Clinton has a large lead with African Americans.
Similar percentages of the candidates’ own parties are backing them (over 8 in 10), while the race is close among independents.
Clinton enjoys a large lead among young voters, but 13 percent say they’ll vote for Gary Johnson or Jill Stein. Trump leads by seven points among seniors.
Clinton has the lead among new voters. Twelve percent of likely voters say 2016 is the first year they voted or will vote, either in the primaries or in the upcoming general election. Clinton leads among those voters, while the race is tighter among those who voted before 2016.
Donald Trump is leading among voters who made up their minds in the last two weeks, while Clinton leads among those who made their decision earlier.
and for laugh and giggles
Monday, Nov 7, 2016 · 4:57:29 PM +00:00
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El Mito
Monmouth poll
Currently, 50% of likely voters support Clinton and 44% back Trump, with 4% supporting Libertarian Gary Johnson and 1% backing Jill Stein of the Green Party. Clinton held a larger 50%+ to 38% lead before the final presidential debate in mid-October and a slimmer 46% to 42% edge right before the first debate in late September.
Only 4% of registered voters say they learned something in the past ten days that caused them to change their vote. The major movement was a drop in the number of undecided and third party votes and an increase in Trump support.
"A key finding in the poll is that Clinton's vote share continues to hover near the 50 percent mark while Trump's support has been more volatile," said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling Institute.