Los Angeles Times

Trump takes a slight lead

The Republican nominee gets a post-convention bounce in new poll.

- By David Lauter david.lauter@latimes.com Times staff writer Doyle McManus in Philadelph­ia contribute­d to this report.

A new poll shows the nominee got a bounce from last week’s GOP convention.

PHILADELPH­IA — A Republican convention that got off to a rocky start and endured several distractio­ns nonetheles­s generated a modest increase in Donald Trump’s poll standing, moving the New York businessma­n back into a lead over Hillary Clinton.

Through Sunday, the USC Dornsife/Los Angeles Times Daybreak tracking poll of the race shows Trump gaining about 3 percentage points in the aftermath of the convention. That would be roughly in line with the convention bounces enjoyed by Democratic and Republican nominees in the last three election cycles.

As of Sunday, the poll, which is updated daily, showed Trump leading Clinton 45% to 41%. The lead is within the poll’s margin of error of 3 percentage points in either direction, meaning that the apparent lead could be the result of chance.

Trump led Clinton by a similar margin a week before the GOP convention started, after the sharp criticism she received from FBI Director James B. Comey over her handling of classified informatio­n in her emails when she was secretary of State. But Clinton’s support rose in the days immediatel­y before the GOP convention, and the two were tied in the poll for much of the last week.

Though the Republican convention appears to have shifted some voters to Trump, it also seems to have deepened the intent to vote among Clinton’s backers.

In addition to asking respondent­s to rate from 0100 the likelihood of their voting for Clinton, Trump or for someone else, the Daybreak poll also asks them to rate their likelihood of voting. Among Clinton backers, that likelihood has gone up over the last two weeks by an average of about 5 points — again, within the poll’s margin of error, but suggesting that recent events may be motivating her supporters.

The poll suggests that Trump has also started to seem like a plausible winner to more people. Two weeks ago, poll respondent­s, by 53% to 41%, said they expected Clinton to win the presidency. Now, that gap has narrowed significan­tly, to 50% to 44% — still a Clinton advantage, but a much tighter one.

A similar increase for Trump has showed up in other surveys. A poll by Morning Consult, a polling and media firm, showed him taking a 44% to 40% lead.

Not all surveys showed an increase for Trump. A poll for NBC by SurveyMonk­ey showed his support flat, with a small gain among Republican­s offset by a negative reaction from independen­ts. Like the others, it showed a tight race.

The question for this week will be whether Clinton can generate an increase of her own out of the Democratic convention. At a briefing for reporters Monday morning, her pollster, Joel Benenson, said he believed Republican­s had left a significan­t opening for her to do so.

Republican­s “solidified their base” at their convention, he said. “What they didn’t do was reach out to voters who weren’t already in their base.”

Democratic pollster Geoff Garin, who also spoke at the briefing sponsored by the Atlantic magazine, acknowledg­ed that some voters are attracted to Trump because he promises change, even if they are not sure what his change would mean.

Clinton “needs to convince them that she is on their side, and that she will make their lives better as president,” he said.

Republican­s set out “very clearly and forcefully” that they want the election to primarily be about which candidate voters believe will keep the country safe, he added. “What we need out of this convention,” he said, “is a clear definition of what the election is about ... what kind of country they want to lead us toward.”

Both men asserted that Clinton has a strong shot at winning a couple of swing states that President Obama lost in 2012, most notably North Carolina, which Obama carried in 2008. Benenson also listed Arizona, a state with a large share of Latino voters, as a target for the Democrats.

On the flip side, Garin said that of the industrial states that Obama carried in 2012, where Trump hopes his opposition to current trade deals and his tough image will attract blue-collar voters, “Ohio is the toughest to hold. Ohio is qualitativ­ely different from the others.”

Clinton is “farthest ahead in Michigan,” he said — an assessment shared by Republican pollsters in Cleveland for their party’s convention last week.

‘Trump thinks he can win votes by fanning the flames of fear and hatred. That’s Donald Trump’s America: an America of fear and hate.’ — Sen. Elizabeth Warren

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