The past week of polling illustrates the central challenge of Hillary Clinton’s candidacy — she is exactly the kind of candidate a majority of Americans say they don’t want to vote for.
A CNN/ORC poll released Monday found 95% of voters believe it is either “very or “extremely” important that the candidate they support be honest and trustworthy. Last week, a majority of voters in Iowa, Colorado, and Virginia told Quinnipiac that Clinton, the Democratic front-runner for the presidential nomination, is neither of those things.
That result isn’t new and may be difficult to change. About half of voters nationwide called Clinton dishonest around the time she launched her campaign, with the number describing her as “honest and trustworthy” dropping to 42% in a June CNN/ORC poll. An NBC/Marist released Sunday reflects the same dynamic in Iowa, where Clinton’s favorability is underwater by 19 points, while only 7% said they didn’t know her well enough to have an opinion. In comparison, more than a third of Iowa voters have yet to decide what they think of her Republican rivals Scott Walker and Marco Rubio.
RELATED: New poll shows Clinton trailing top GOPers in key swing states
In another troubling sign for the former senator and secretary of state, the CNN poll shows an electorate broadly dissatisfied with the Washington establishment and hungry for an authentic, unconventional leader. Only three in ten Americans told pollsters that their views are represented in Washington, while 76% said it was at least somewhat important that their candidate be something other than “a typical politician.”








