2016-05-05

John Kasich quits Republican race, leaving Trump last man standing

Analysis: Why Trump v Clinton will be an unpopularity contest

Big night in Indiana: 10 things we learned

Delegate tracker: Where the Democrats (and, well, Trump) stand

3.38am BST

It’s finally happened.

2.20am BST

In a pair of new statements, likely Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton’s campaign team declared that they are “disgusted” with Donald Trump’s accession to the Republican nomination, and will use every weapon in her considerable arsenal to prevent him from winning the White House.

2.11am BST

Presumptive Republican nominee Donald Trump told Fox News tonight that he is open to considering Texas senator and former opponent Ted Cruz as his vice presidential pick, lauding Cruz as “a capable guy” a little more than 24 hours after he questioned whether Cruz’s father was involved in the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

“He was a very strong competitor. He really competed hard and tough,” Trump said, saying that a vice presidential nomination was “something we can think about.”

1.55am BST

Malcolm Turnbull has sought to allay fears about Donald Trump winning the US presidency by saying the Australia-US alliance would remain strong regardless of who was president although Australians may observe US elections with consternation at times.

Related: Australia-US alliance will remain strong even if Trump wins, says Turnbull

1.33am BST

South Carolina Governor Nikki Haley, whose name has been mentioned as a possible vice presidential pick, said today that although she plans on supporting Donald Trump as the Republican nominee, she is not interested in the job.

1.23am BST

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell has released a statement regarding presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump’s accession to the nomination:

I have committed to supporting the nominee chosen by Republican voters, and Donald Trump, the presumptive nominee, is now on the verge of clinching that nomination. Republicans are committed to preventing what would be a third term of Barack Obama and restoring economic and national security after eight years of a Democrat in the White House. As the presumptive nominee, he now has the opportunity and the obligation to unite our party around our goals.

1.05am BST

Mac Stipanovich, a major Florida fundraiser and close ally of the Bush political dynasty, has joined that clan’s patriarchs in refusing to endorse or support Donald Trump as the party’s nominee - and has gone a step further, writing an open letter to Florida Republican urging them to push for Trump’s defeat.

“Make no mistake, we Republicans stand on the threshold of a fundamental moral test in the 2016 presidential election, a challenge so serious as to be existential,” Stipanovich writes in the Tallahassee Democrat.

12.51am BST

Neither George HW nor George W Bush, the only two living former Republican presidents of the United States, will endorse Donald Trump.

Related: Neither former Bush president will endorse Donald Trump

12.38am BST

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump was on fire tonight on NBC Nightly News, telling host Lester Holt - who, for some reason, anchored the entire evening newscast from Trump Tower - that he wasn’t backing down on a single policy proposal from the Republican primary.

12.22am BST

The responses to this tweet from the Republican party are worth taking a look:

Thank you to the entire Republican field for a hard fought race. The Party is better for your efforts.

I assume this is a parody account? https://t.co/kPOoDpVmU7

12.06am BST

The Rolling Stones have asked presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to stop playing their songs at his campaign events.

11.52pm BST

In her first sitdown interview since losing last night’s Indiana presidential primary, former secretary of state and likely Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton fixed her aims on Donald Trump, the newly minted (for all intents and purposes) Republican nominee.

“I don’t think we can take a risk on a loose cannon like Donald Trump running our country,” Clinton told CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

Here’s what else is real: @realDonaldTrump has built his campaign on racism, sexism, and xenophobia.

There's more enthusiasm for @realDonaldTrump among leaders of the KKK than leaders of the political party he now controls.

.@realDonaldTrump incites supporters to violence, praises Putin, and is "cool with being called an authoritarian."

11.39pm BST

President Barack Obama sipped filtered water in Flint, Michigan, this afternoon and assured parents that anyone older than six could do the same during a visit to a city still reeling from a scandal over lead-tainted drinking water.

11.28pm BST

The surprises keep coming from Donald Trump’s first sitdown as the presumptive Republican nominee, after the candidate changed his position on raising the minimum wage in an interview with CNN’s Wolf Blitzer.

“You have to have something you can live on,” Trump said. “But what I’m really looking to do is get people great jobs so they make much more money than that, much more money than the $15.”

Donald Trump: I'm open to doing something on the minimum wage https://t.co/6OZtrfIwim https://t.co/pWIfjE8MhH

11.22pm BST

Presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump has cast aside one of his main selling points, telling the Wall Street Journal that he will not self-fund his presidential campaign during the general election.

Instead, Trump said, he’ll be creating a “world-class finance organization” to rival that of likely Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton.

11.13pm BST

In his first in-person interview since functionally clinching the Republican presidential nomination, Donald Trump distanced himself from comments he made yesterday morning linking former opponent Ted Cruz’s father with Lee Harvey Oswald, the man who assassinated John F. Kennedy in 1963.

“Ted Cruz’s father, seems like a nice guy, don’t know him,” Trump told CNN’s Wolf Blitzer. “He made horrible statements about me, praying for bad things to happen to me, essentially.”

11.05pm BST

In his first sitdown interview as the presumptive Republican presidential nominee, Donald Trump refused to back down his his longstanding - and long-since debunked - claims that Barack Obama was not born in the United States, and also refused to denounce antisemitic attacks on a journalist who wrote a profile about his wife.

10.34pm BST

The head of the Republican Jewish Coalition has released a statement purporting to congratulate presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump on clearing the field to the party’s nomination, but makes little mention of him beyond the first sentence of the statement.

“The Republican Jewish Coalition congratulates Donald Trump on being the presumptive presidential nominee of the Republican party,” said RJC chair David Flaum, before moving on to more important matters.

10.29pm BST

And with that, resistance to Donald Trump’s capture of the Republican party has officially crumbled as his sole remaining opponent conceded there was no chance of preventing the New York businessman from becoming the party’s presidential nominee.

10.24pm BST

After quoting Alexis de Tocqueville, John Kasich officially announces the suspension of his presidential campaign.

10.21pm BST

John Kasich continues a speech widely anticipated to lead to the suspension of his presidential campaign with a series of policy platforms.

“Let me be clear - we all know that economic growth is imperative to the success of our country,” Kasich says. “And I can tell you that economic growth can be achieved by our public officials if they just do their jobs. But they have to do their job. They can’t focus on focus groups, and they have to overcome the fear of reelection or criticism.”

10.18pm BST

Tearing up, John Kasich opens up about the connections he made with voters in the Republican primary campaign, particularly one moment that made news around the world.

10.15pm BST

John Kasich goes over the surprising arc of his presidential primary campaign.

“I visited these beautiful, beautiful towns in New Hampshire, and people had really counted me out in New Hampshire, but when we hit our 100th town hall, it was really remarkable. Those beautiful towns... I will never forget the people of New Hampshire,” Kasich says.

10.12pm BST

“We never had all the money we wanted - we were probably outspent 50-to-one,” Kasich says, but he thanks his financial backers who “did everything they could possibly do.”

“We had a great time, and we’re gonna have a lot more fun in the future.”

10.11pm BST

Ohio governor John Kasich begins by thanking his wife, Karen, his daughters and his senior campaign staff for their help and support during his campaign for the Republican nomination.

“We all want to be part of something bigger than ourselves,” Kasich told the audience, composed of journalists, staffers and supporters, about his family and supporters, “and I think we do it with honesty and integrity, and as a result, I think I know, and I sure hope and pray that this experience that they have had in this campaign is improved and changed their lives for the better.”

10.07pm BST

Ohio governor John Kasich, the second-to-last man standing in the Republican presidential primary, is set to address reporters and supporters in Columbus, Ohio, this afternoon after last night’s Indiana primary paved the way for billionaire real estate tycoon Donald Trump’s improbable accession to the Republican nomination.

9.45pm BST

Coming up: Governor John Kasich of Ohio will formally quit the race for the Republican presidential nomination with a statement in his home state at 5pm, following Texas senator Ted Cruz’s decision last night to step aside in favor of presumptive nominee Donald Trump.

9.32pm BST

Although Barack Obama said that his speech in Flint was not the time or place to relitigate “every screwup” that lead to the Flint water crisis, he said that the lead contamination in the industrial city was part of “a broader mindset, a bigger attitude, a corrosive attitude that exists in our politics and exists in too many levels of our government.”

9.22pm BST

After highlighting the efforts made by local government officials who have expanded health services, provided water and baby formula and tested homes for lead exposure, Barack Obama called on local members of the Flint, Michigan, community to help lead the fight against lead contamination.

“This is not a government effort alone - we need our businesses and nonprofits and philanthropists to stand up,” Obama said. “And what’s incredible about Flint is the number of volunteers who have already paved the way.”

9.16pm BST

“Not too long ago, I received a letter fro a young lady - an 8-year-old girl named Mari Copeny,” Barack Obama told the crowd. “You may know her as Little Miss Flint.”

9.12pm BST

President Barack Obama is speaking to an audience of roughly 1,000 people at Flint Northwestern High School in Flint, Michigan, the president’s first visit to the city since its lead-contaminated water crisis began nearly two years ago.

The president’s visit to the majority-black city comes amid high levels of frustration with local, state and federal government authorities in addressing the crisis,

8.58pm BST

Never say #NeverTrump... unless you want Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton quoting you in a fundraising email to highlight the dissension within the Republican ranks.

On the heels of a new ad that shows a medley of Republicans warning that Donald Trump as the party’s presidential nominee would sow chaos and discord throughout the land, Clinton is extending a welcoming hand to the many, many Republicans who have declared that they would rather live with her than die with the Donald.

8.30pm BST

One of Donald Trump’s earliest endorsers admitted this morning that, although he is pleased with the unlikely rise of the billionaire real estate tycoon to the presumptive Republican nomination, the candidate “has some work to do” in communicating with female voters in a way that doesn’t send them fleeing to support Hillary Clinton.

8.03pm BST

Here’s a new Clinton video spot featuring a medley of bad things senior Republicans have said about Trump this election cycle. (Most of the Republicans in question, with the exception of Mitt Romney, were running against Trump at the time.)

Featuring cameos by Marco Rubio, Ted Cruz, Mitt Romney, George Pataki, Carly Fiorina, Jeb Bush and Lindsey Graham:

"President Trump" is a dangerous proposition.

Mitt Romney, Ted Cruz, and Marco Rubio agree.https://t.co/fUkISvgaXC

7.43pm BST

Ha.

Tomorrow, Obama national security team will begin debating plan to arm moderate Republican rebels.

7.43pm BST

“The Rolling Stones have asked presumptive Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump to stop playing their songs at his campaign events, the AP reports:

In a statement Wednesday, the rock band said they have not given permission to the Trump campaign to use their songs and “have requested that they cease all use immediately.”

A Trump campaign spokeswoman didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

7.24pm BST

Hillary Clinton is in a live interview with CNN’s Anderson Cooper, now airing. She criticizes Trump’s “aggressive, bullying” manner and repeats that he’s a “loose cannon”: “this to me is a case of a blustering, bullying guy” who left his opponents “dumbfounded,” she says, adding that Trump’s Republican rivals did not know how to handle him.

The implication being that she does.

"I don't think we can take a risk on a loose cannon like Donald Trump running the country." —Hillary to @AndersonCooper

Asked on @CNN if she'll start doing as many media interviews as Trump does, Hillary says it's time for him to answer tough Qs. !?!

.@andersoncooper are you going to be more accessible to reporters now?

Hillary Clinton: [Words that do not answer the question]

7.16pm BST

Further Republican indigestion – and (premature/misguided?) Democratic delight – at the advent of nominee Trump:

Text from a Kasich staffer: “Sucks to be a Republican."

Goodbye, Republican Party. And Good Riddance. https://t.co/TXVAwcKdHQ via @theblaze

Rush Limbaugh: "My instinctive feeling right now is that Trump is gonna win, beat Hillary badly, that it could be landslide proportions."

The epidemic of schadenfreude in Democratic circles today is something to behold.

7.09pm BST

Hillary Clinton will close out the week with campaign events in California, her team has announced. She’ll be in Los Angeles and Oakland on Thursday and Friday for “public organizing events” and speeches.

"Unity versus division, compassion versus selfishness, and love versus hate. The stakes don’t get much higher." pic.twitter.com/nwy7MfMutc

7.03pm BST

Wisconsin governor Scott Walker, whose plea upon his early exit from the presidential race for fellow candidates to do the same in order to set up a narrow contest that could stop Trump, has weighed in on a potential Trump-Clinton general election matchup.

He’s staying true to the GOP:

.@GovWalker tells reporters that @realDonaldTrump is a better choice than @HillaryClinton. #wipolitics pic.twitter.com/OQOseCENDy

6.34pm BST

With Donald Trump as the Republican party’s presumptive nominee, it’s time for him to start contemplating a running mate, writes Guardian politics reporter Ben Jacobs:

Here are five options for the veep stakes for the outsider who has often said he would look for a number two with political experience:

Related: Who will be Donald Trump's running mate? Here are five options

6.04pm BST

In our blog coverage of the Indiana result last night, we rounded up Republican voices who said they would leave the party because of Trump or who said they would vote for Hillary Clinton or who at least said they would never vote for Trump.

The flow of Republicans through the outdoor continues Wednesday – although they’ll have a lot of time to reconsider before November.

A message for my fellow Republicans: If you back Trump you will not be trusted again | Fox News | https://t.co/BvmCU4KwQk

The path to national recovery is getting longer--as both broken parties move closer to nominating fundamentally dishonest 2016 candidates.

If we nominate Trump, we will get destroyed.......and we will deserve it.

More Republicans voted for non-Trump candidates than Trump, so I'm with the rest. https://t.co/YI9FP8c5LY

Just asked the RNC to remove me from all their mailing lists because I'm leaving the party. That felt good.

All we have to see, is that I don't belong to you. And you don't belong to me.

Freedom pic.twitter.com/JBUtF8fsdZ

the GOP is going to nominate for President a guy who reads the National Enquirer and thinks it's on the level. I'm with her.

I hope history remembers those who gave up their conservative principles for the cult of personality and celebrity. And those who didn't.

Just cancelled my plane and hotel reservations for Cleveland.

I am no longer a Republican.

pic.twitter.com/L0hQvfBSvS

I have officially de-registered as a Republican. pic.twitter.com/DjRI21Oyvx

A Republican Party without a sense of shame is a Republican Party I don’t want to be a part of. https://t.co/xZQzKyN1Xr

The voters have spoken https://t.co/AXN0ULHhwY

Donald Trump broke the code, owned the media, and inspired the masses. I will be all in to help him defeat Hillary Clinton and I call upon all fellow Republicans to unite in defeating Hillary and abandoning and repudiating the hapless “Never Trump” nonsense.

When asked whether McConnell will support Trump, spox points to these comments from @SenateMajLdr last week https://t.co/xMx0ss59PH

McConnell freely admits he doesn’t know Trump well “but I’ve met him a few times in the past. He was always friendly and supportive. He’s called me a couple of times recently and we’ve had pleasant conversations.”

5.47pm BST

How far we’ve come:

❎Perry
❎Walker
❎Jindal
❎Graham
❎Pataki
❎Huckabee
❎Paul
❎Santorum
❎Fiorina
❎Christie
❎Gilmore
❎Bush
❎Carson
❎Rubio
❎Cruz
❎Kasich
✅Trump

5.46pm BST

A senior campaign source confirmed to the Guardian that Ohio governor John Kasich would be suspending his campaign on Wednesday afternoon.

5.45pm BST

As the presumptive Republican nominee, Trump will gain access to state secrets, Time reports:

Later this year, Trump will begin receiving regular national security / intel briefings. After the convention GSA will sign transition MOU

5.39pm BST

The Ohio Democratic party has released a statement on Kasich’s reported decision to drop out of the presidential race.

The local Democrats aren’t happy about how the Republican governor, whose current second term is up in 2018, has been spending his 2016.

...It’s time that Ohio had a governor who was actually doing something about all of that, rather than gallivanting across the country.

In addition, we hope that the Kasich administration will provide a full accounting of the cost to Ohio taxpayers and Kasich’s campaign will reimburse the state for every single penny that his failed campaign cost the taxpayers of Ohio.

5.33pm BST

Donald Trump is not resting on his laurels – tomorrow he pops up in West Virginia, which with Nebraska votes this coming Tuesday:

Join me in Charleston, WV - tomorrow! https://t.co/kv624y9UOm

5.22pm BST

Having some fun with the plan hatched by the Cruz and Kasich campaigns not so long ago to divide and conquer the states of Indiana, Oregon and New Mexico against Trump. The divide part, maybe; the conquer part, hardly:

BREAKING: New Kasich and Cruz alliance to cede New Mexico & Oregon to Trump. Will divide up which California CDs they both won't campaign in

5.13pm BST

John Kasich will suspend his campaign for president, the Associated Press reports, after an earlier announcement that the governor had canceled events and was on his way home to Ohio.

Kasich finishes with just 153 delegates – good for fourth place, after Trump, Cruz and Marco Rubio, who captured 171 delegates before dropping out in March.

BREAKING: AP sources: Kasich to end his bid for White House; Trump to become presumptive GOP nominee for president. pic.twitter.com/1AUaQKs0rb

Related: John Kasich to make statement in Ohio amid speculation he will drop out

5.09pm BST

Donald Trump will set up a committee “soon” to pick a running mate in advance of the July convention, and the committee will include retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson, Trump tells the New York Times:

“I’ll set up a committee, and that I will do soon,” Trump said. “I think on the committee I’ll have Dr Ben Carson and some other folks.”

5.01pm BST

To think that for six days, she was a heartbeat, an election and about 700 delegates away from the presidency.

What a difference a day makes. Carly Fiorina at Indy Airport & no one cares. (Pic: Steve Handelsman) #Election2016 pic.twitter.com/dyurOy2gia

4.49pm BST

“Donald Grump happens to have the most trash of any grouch in the world.”

Trump once inspired a full Sesame Street sketch - Donald Grump - belittling grouches and hoarding trash https://t.co/T5XV9U005a

4.41pm BST

The election of Donald Trump would derail the landmark agreement on climate change reached in Paris last December, the architect of the accord has warned, writes the Guardian’s Fiona Harvey:

Trump is now virtually certain to be the Republican candidate for president and has said “I am not a great believer in manmade climate change”, leading to fears he would attempt to unpick the historic agreement if he became president.

Related: Donald Trump's election would derail Paris climate deal, warns its architect

4.32pm BST

Guardian Washington bureau chief Dan Roberts:

Kasich press conference in DC cancelled "He will make an announcement in Ohio at 5pm" his adviser tells reporters here. Sounds like he's out

4.21pm BST

The advent of Donald Trump as the Republican nominee has some conservative thinkers taking a second look at Merrick Garland, the DC circuit judge nominated by president Obama to fill the Supreme Court vacancy whom Senate leaders have vowed not to grant a hearing.

“Our view is this: give the people a voice in filling this vacancy,” Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell said in March. By which he meant, let’s see if we can elect a Republican president (assuming we hold the senate majority) and nominate and confirm a more palatable candidate.

Garland is not a great choice, but he is not a terrible one, either. And more than anything, he is old (for a modern Supreme Court appointment) and will be up for replacement in probably 10 years instead of 20 or 30.

Republicans must know that there is absolutely no chance that we will win the White House in 2016 now. They must also know that we are likely to lose the Senate as well. So the choices, essentially, are to confirm Garland and have another bite at the apple in a decade, or watch as President Clinton nominates someone who is radically more leftist and 10-15 years younger, and we are in no position to stop it.

Here's a dramatization of what would happen if Hillary wins and Senate GOP offers to confirm Garland. https://t.co/ssUAaTWoVU

Q: How bad is the outlook for Senate Republicans?

A: Pretty bad, according to many of the party’s own strategists.

3.51pm BST

Hillary Clinton sees a fundraising opportunity in the moment of mass realization that Trump has clinched it:

Clinton, in Trump $$ email: "The whole world is counting on us to win this thing. And we owe it to them to step up." pic.twitter.com/GrFjDZmumy

There's only one candidate left who can stop a Trump presidency.

Chip in now if you've got Hillary's back: https://t.co/HkpiIXhekF

3.40pm BST

Republican John Kasich, the lone challenger holding out against Trump, has scheduled a press conference this morning at Dulles Airport.

Guardian Washington bureau chief Dan Roberts is among the press in attendance:

Waiting for John Kasich/ Obe Wan to show up at Dulles and every 5 mins this Star Wars theme strikes up from a laptop https://t.co/QZfNPOBpg7

Our Only Hope#MayThe4thBeWithYou #StarWarsDayhttps://t.co/Bi2qNGw2oM

Media contingent awaiting @JohnKasich press conf at Dulles airport pic.twitter.com/RCiWvkqhma

3.31pm BST

Elizabeth Warren, the Massachusetts senator and progressive standard bearer, weighed in on the Indiana result last night, at some length and with some urgency of tone, on Twitter.

“.@realDonaldTrump is now the leader of the @GOP. It’s real - he is one step away from the White House,” Warren began:

Here’s what else is real: @realDonaldTrump has built his campaign on racism, sexism, and xenophobia.

There's more enthusiasm for @realDonaldTrump among leaders of the KKK than leaders of the political party he now controls.

.@realDonaldTrump incites supporters to violence, praises Putin, and is “cool with being called an authoritarian.”

.@realDonaldTrump attacks vets like @SenJohnMcCain who were captured & puts our servicemembers at risk by cheerleading illegal torture.

I'm going to fight my heart out to make sure @realDonaldTrump’s toxic stew of hatred & insecurity never reaches the White House.

3.20pm BST

Zero tossup states? What fun is that?

(N.B.: The Democrats don’t yet have a nominee and the Republicans don’t even technically have a nominee, and it’s rash to the point of reckless to take general election opinion polls at face value so far in advance. So: which of the state characterizations below is shakiest?)

Wow. There are ZERO toss up states right now according to UVa's Center for Politics. pic.twitter.com/oEqSJ3vUHS

Republicans have a massive electoral map problem that has nothing to do with Donald Trump https://t.co/PXm060UjyW

If Clinton wins the 19 states (and D.C.) that every Democratic nominee has won from 1992 to 2012, she has 242 electoral votes. Add Florida’s 29 and you get 271. Game over.

3.15pm BST

Here are a few tidbits from overnight not-to-be missed:

Ted Cruz ends campaign by accidentally hitting, elbowing his wife in the face pic.twitter.com/epO1tzKgTT

Tomorrow's front page:
Dearly beloved, we are gathered here today to mourn the @GOP https://t.co/ywZB1bH1na pic.twitter.com/7RsKFIrSYk

Donald Trump is the GOP's nominee — it's time for Cruz and Kasich to drop out https://t.co/Xqbm31wxxv pic.twitter.com/g31IZ562cX

3.13pm BST

The new CNN/ORC polls showing Clinton up 54-41 on Trump in a general election matchup depicts significant weaknesses for Trump among women and nonwhite voters. The presumptive Republican nominee performs less well with both groups than did 2012 nominee Mitt Romney, who lost by 126 electoral votes.

In new @CNN @realDonaldTrump even w/@HillaryClinton among men but she leads +26 among women. Trump +9 w/whites, less than 1/2 Romney advtg

Clinton is also more trusted than Trump on many issues voters rank as critically important, with one big exception. By a 50% to 45% margin, voters say Trump would do a better job handling the economy than Clinton would.

"As he goes after women, as he goes after literally every group, I'm going to be their voice." —Hillary on Trumphttps://t.co/iNUo2EuTYO

3.07pm BST

British prime minister David Cameron still thinks Donald Trump’s proposed Muslim ban is “divisive, stupid and wrong.”

No 10 says Cameron has 'no intention' of withdrawing his "stupid, wrong' comment re Trump's Muslim ban plan - https://t.co/8RsfAovtla

The prime minister has no intention of withdrawing his comments, which were made in response to comments that Donald Trump made calling for a ban on Muslims entering the US. That was the context for the PM’s comments.

1.49pm BST

Hello, and welcome to our live-wire coverage of the 2016 race for the White House. That race was dramatically streamlined Tuesday night as Donald Trump scored a big win in Indiana, causing Texas senator Ted Cruz to suspend his campaign and clearing Trump’s way to the Republican nomination.

“I don’t know if he likes me or doesn’t like me,” Trump said of Cruz in a victory speech. “But he is one hell of a competitor. He has an amazing future.”

Related: Indiana primary results: track the votes, county by county

On @GMA, @realDonaldTrump declines to apologize for claim about Cruz's father: "I don't think anybody denied it" https://t.co/UTU8TkCvSE

NEW CNN/ORC National Poll:
Clinton: 54
Trump: 41https://t.co/WEKqPE0u58

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