Three key swing states are turning on Hillary Clinton, according to a new Quinnipiac poll released Wednesday.
In Colorado, Iowa, and Virginia, the Democratic Party’s front-runner for the presidential nomination has fallen behind three of the GOP’s leading candidates in hypothetical general election match-ups.
The poll found Florida Sen. Marco Rubio leading the former secretary of state by a margin of 46% to 38% in Colorado, 44% to 36% in Iowa, and 43% to 41% in Virginia. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush beats Clinton 41% to 36% in Colorado, 42% to 36% in Iowa, and 42% to 39% in Virginia. And Wisconsin Gov. Scott Walker bests her with 47% to 38% in Colorado, 45% to 37% in Iowa, and 43% to 40% in Virginia.
Back in April, Quinnipiac found Clinton leading the majority of those same hypothetical contests. But the likely cause of that declining support may be more concerning to Clinton than the poll’s headline results — majorities in all three states said they believe Clinton is “not honest or trustworthy.”
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Three months ago, 45% of Iowa voters saw Clinton favorably compared to 47% unfavorably. Now, only 33% of Iowans see her in a positive light, while 56% disapprove. In all three of the swing states, the only candidate of either party with higher unfavorables than Clinton is former reality star and current gaffe-factory Donald Trump.
Few political analysts put much stock in a single poll taken more than a year before an election. And in national surveys, Clinton consistently posts commanding leads over her GOP rivals.
“I give no credence to any poll that’s taken now,” former RNC chairman and current msnbc analyst Michael Steele said in an interview. “It means absolutely nothing. It is the quintessential definition of nothingness. Because, by and large, the American people are on summer vacation.”
Still, Quinnipiac’s findings call into question one of Clinton’s most powerful advantages in the Democratic primary — her perceived “electability.”









