The Backup a favor of Donald Trump suffered another decline, according to a survey released Monday, weighing one that kept him at the head of the Republicans to the US presidential candidates no longer has a wide advantage f About His closest competitors.
The decline in the level of support was the result of his performance during the last Republican debate, which for a majority of Americans the former CEO of Hewlett Packard, Carly Fiorina, emerged as the clear winner.
The new joint survey by CNN and ORC firm placed a triumph at the head of preferences with 24 percent followed by Fiorina with 15 percent and neurosurgeon Ben Carson in La Tercera s position with 14 percent .
For Trump, that level of support meant a drop of eight percentage points from a CNN / ORC month led UN Back In Which Appeared with 32 percent; While Carson was 19 percent.
Unlike the primer Republican debate, Trump was relegated This time a third level of the UN after 52 percent of respondents said the meeting was won by Fiorina, while paragraph 31 percent tycoon was the loser.
UN Paragraph 14 percent of Republicans who viewed debate, senator from Florida, Marco Rubio, won the debate.
Swindle wave, Rubio was placed in the Fourth s position in the long list of applicants con un m backing of 11 percent, a gain of three points from the previous survey.
The former governor of Florida, Jeb Bush, was relegated to fifth s position con un m back nine percent, followed by Texas Senator Ted Cruz, and former governor of Arkansas, Mike Huckebee, with six percent , respectively.
In the seventh s position I was placed Senator from Kentucky, Rand Paul, with four percent, followed by the governor of New Jersey, Chris Christie, with three percent, the governor of Ohio, John Kasich, with two percent and the former senator from Massachusetts, Rick Santorum, with just one percent.
These results gave land loss Trump Account has been experiencing in recent weeks in other surveys, particularly against Carson, who could not gain ground More With his performance at the last debate.
National Telephone Survey was conducted from 17 to 19 September Six thousand randomly selected adults, the majority of whom are registered to vote, and presents UN margin of error of 4.5 percent.