Hillary Clinton's popularity hits a new low as voters say they don't trust her OR Trump and that NEITHER care about people like them
- A majority, 57 percent, say she's untrustworthy isn't concerned about people like them, 52 percent.
- Just four in 10 Americans have a positive opinion of her, down from a high of 61 percent in February of 2013
- Voters don't like Clinton, but they don't think GOP front-runner Donald Trump is trustworthy or down-to-earth, either
- They would rather have the former first lady reign the White House again than see the real estate mogul move in
Hillary Clinton's favorability is at a new low as voters increasingly say she can't be trusted and doesn't care about people like them.
But they don't think the GOP's front-runner for president Donald Trump is trustworthy or down-to-earth, either, and would rather have the former first lady reign the White House again than see the real estate mogul move in.
Clinton would handily beat Trump in a head-to-head match-up as would Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders and Vice President Joe Biden, who has not said whether he's running or not in 2016.
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Hillary Clinton's favorability is at a new low as voters increasingly say she can't be trusted and doesn't care about people like them. But they don't think that GOP front-runner Donald Trump is trustworthy or down-to-earth, either
Trump attends a press conference, with son Eric Trump, left, daughter Ivanka Trump and her husband Jared Kushner, right, at the Trump Turnberry Resort in Scotland today
The golf course in Ayrshire is hosting the Ricoh Women's British Open. Trump is winning the GOP nomination in the polls but three in 10 Republicans say they could not see themselves supporting him in the primary election, and 59 percent of all voters say they don't like him
Though Trump outpaces his next closest GOP rival, Scott Walker, by seven points and is the first choice of one in five Republican voters, he's also the least liked Republican candidate by a wide margin, according to a new Quinnipiac poll.
Three in 10 Republicans say they could not see themselves supporting Trump in the primary election, and 59 percent of all voters say they don't like him.
Likewise, 58 percent of the electorate thinks he has a problem with truth-telling and 63 percent of Americans think he doesn't care about their needs.
'They love him and they hate him. Donald Trump triumphs on the stump so far, but do voters REALLY want him? Maybe not so much,' Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll, said in a statement.
Clinton doesn't fare much better with the public. A majority, 57 percent, say she's untrustworthy isn't concerned about people like them, 52 percent. Just four in 10 Americans have a positive opinion of her, down from a high of 61 percent in February of 2013.
She's seen her popularity steadily decline since last November, when she triumphantly campaigned for Democrats competing for the U.S. Senate in the unpopular president's stead.
Now it's Obama who's back on top, garnering a 49 percent approval rating in a recent CNN/ORC International poll, and Clinton whose struggling to connect with voters.
The ongoing scandal surrounding her use of a private email system and server, which government watchdogs say she used to discuss classified material on at least four occasions, breaking the rules, while she was secretary of state has hurt her chances of becoming president.
In Quinnipiaic's latest poll, released this morning, she would defeat Trump 48 percent to 36 percent, but she'd lose the general election to ex-Florida Governor Jeb Bush by one point, 41-42 and would best Wisconsin Governor Scott Walker, another leading Republican candidate by a single point, 44 to 43.
'The not-so-good news is that she is locked in too-close to call races with Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker and former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush. And Vice President Joseph Biden runs just as well as her against the top Republicans,' Malloy said.
Biden would also beat Trump by 12 points, and he'd best Bush by one. He'd tie Walker, 43-43.
Even Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders, who trails Clinton in the Democratic primary by 38 points, would easily beat Trump in a general election match-up. However, up against Bush or Walker he'd lose by five points each.
Bush, though he has taken a backseat to Trump in headlines, appears to have benefited from his rival's meteoric rise when it comes to voters' impressions of him as a presidential candidate.
He's better liked now than at any previous time in the primary race, with 43 percent giving him their approval and 41 percent saying they're not fans of his.
Walker, Biden and Sanders also scored higher favoribility ratings than in the past.
Among GOP voters, Bush and Walker were the only two candidates of the 16 running, other than Trump, who had double digit support in the primary election.
Looking only at self-identified Democrats, Sanders and Biden were the only candidates to poll at 10 percent or higher, as well.
Former Maryland Governor Martin O'Malley, who announced his candidacy in May, has failed to gain any traction with Democrats and still takes just one percent of the vote - the same amount as ex-Virginia Senator Jim Webb, who joined the race earlier this month.
Quinnipiac's poll shows ex-Rhode Island Governor Lincoln Chafee with no measurable support at all.
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