Casu During Clinton s Hurried Election Day Photo Op, No Time For Questions
Hillary Clinton is poised to have a big night next week when Ohio and Florida vote on March 15, if a new poll out Wednesday morning is correct. Polling in Michigan turned out to be incorrect, showing Clinton beating Sanders with a double-digit lead, and in the end, though it was close, Sanders ultimately won.Clinton leads her primary challenger, Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, by 30 points in Florida and 9 points in Ohio, according to new numbers from Quinnipiac University. The pair of states are, along with Illinois, the biggest delegate prizes remaining in the month of March.Hillary Clinton: Running for president about delivering results, not insultsLive updates: CBS News projects Bernie Sanders wins MichiganIn Florida, Clinton s 62-32 lead is partially powered by a massive lead among women: she takes 69 percent of that demographic, compared with 24 percent for Sanders. She also does well among voters aged 65 or older: Clinton wins 72 percent of them in the poll, compared with 21 percent for Sanders.
stanley cup Clinton and Sanders were tied 49-49 among voters aged 18 to 44 in the poll, reflecting Sanders s strength in contests thus far among young voters.In Ohio, Clinton leads 52 percent to 43 percent overall, with a 25-percent lead among women 59 percent to 34 percent . Sanders
stanley tumbler has a slight lead among
stanley quencher men there: he takes 53 percent of the demographic, compared with 44 percent for Clinton. Sanders does well among voters who describe themselv Rkla Evan Bayh: I Do Not Love Congress
Hundreds of people waited in lines more than three hours aft
stanley cup er polls closed Tuesday night in hotly contested Ohio, where elections officials took extra voting machines to some precincts to try to speed things up and volunteers passed out hot chocolate to warm voters waiting in cold rain.Many elections officials said people still in line at the poll closing time of 7:30 p.m. would be allowed to vote.The Lorain County Board of Elections took extra voting equipment to two precincts near Oberlin College, where the wait was up to five hours at one point. Though outsi
stanley cup de groups and the political parties had worried that chaos would be created by a high number of new voters and the potential for registration challenges, and a host of legal moves against Repbulican vote challengers at polilng places, most problems were minor in one of the most anticipated elections in the nation s history. Jonathan Mead was the last person allowed through the door
stanley cup at First Church in Oberlin. The 18-year-old freshman from Chestnut Ridge, N.Y., had come and gone twice before deciding to stick it out so he could vote for Sen. John Kerry. When the polls closed, there were about 400 people ahead of him. I m very glad that so many people came and that I had to wait, said Mead, who brought his developmental psychology homework to pass the time until he finally cast his ballot at 10 p.m.Since it was a punch-card, he took extra care to make sure there wasn t a rep