Opinion · 114th Congress
Trump-Clinton Debate: Much Ado but Little Impact?
Like Hillary Clinton, the 47-year-old Nixon believed that he could power through any obstacle.
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Like Hillary Clinton, the 47-year-old Nixon believed that he could power through any obstacle.
As I write this, the election forecasting site FiveThirtyEight says that if the election were held today, he’d have close to a 47 percent chance of winning.
And so, 47 years after a Wellesley commencement speaker stood in her cap and grown and spoke of “leadership and power,” a radiant Hillary Rodham Clinton finally crashed through the glass ceiling
A recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll found that 47 percent of Republican women could not imagine themselves voting for Trump.
signs, no last name on the 47-page policy packet voters get when they walk in the door — there has been no escaping the fact that Jeb Bush is his father’s son and W.’s brother, for better and for worse
According to a study by the Brennan Center for Justice in the 10 most competitive Senate races in 2014, outside spending accounted for 47 percent of all money in the races, with the candidates spending
Mainstream Republicans Jeb Bush, Chris Christie and John Kasich recognized weeks ago that their best hope was in New Hampshire, where 47 percent of the GOP primary voters in 2012 called themselves moderate
And New Hampshire — where 47 percent of the voters in the 2012 GOP primary identified themselves as “moderate or liberal” — is poised to offer Kasich a major boost when it holds the opening-gun primary
There is broad national support for these measures: A CNN poll found that 62 percent of people favor “a ban on the manufacture, sale and possession of semi-automatic assault guns, such as the AK-47.”