As the American public views the 2016 presidential campaign, it’s seeing many more flaws than strengths, according to results from a new national NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll.
Nearly seven-in-10 registered voters say they couldn’t see themselves supporting Republican frontrunner Donald Trump; 61 percent say they couldn’t back fellow Republican Ted Cruz; and 58 percent couldn’t see themselves voting for Democratic favorite Hillary Clinton.
What’s more, 65 percent of all voters have a negative view of Trump – making him the most unpopular major presidential candidate in the history of the NBC/WSJ poll. Fifty-six percent have an unfavorable view of Clinton, which is up five points from last month. And almost half of voters view Cruz in a negative light.
To top it off, just 19 percent of all respondents give Clinton high marks for being honest and trustworthy, while only 12 percent give Trump high scores for having the right temperament.
“The Republicans have a party problem, and the Democrats have a candidate problem,” says Democratic pollster Peter Hart, who conducted this survey with Republican pollster Bill McInturff and his firm Public Opinion Strategies.
Adds Democratic pollster Fred Yang of Hart Research Associates, “At some point, when the confetti is on the floor and the lights are turned out, the winner needs to govern. And the outlook for the next president, whoever he or she will turn out to be, looks grim.”
Clinton tops Trump 50%-39% in a matchup, but leads Cruz just 46%-44%
According to the poll, Clinton leads Trump by 11 points in hypothetical general-election matchup, 50 percent to 39 percent – essentially unchanged from a month ago.
But Clinton is ahead of Cruz by just two points, 46 percent to 44 percent, which again is unchanged from March.
Yet Bernie Sanders – whose positive rating outweighs his negative score in the poll – bests Cruz by 12 points, 52 percent to 40 percent.
And John Kasich, who trails Trump and Cruz in the GOP delegate race but holds the highest positive-negative score in the poll, beats Clinton by 12 points, 51 percent to 39 percent.
Intraparty fights bruise the frontrunners
One reason for the rising negative numbers for both Trump and Clinton are their intraparty bruises as the primary races become more competitive.
Forty-one percent of Sanders’ voters have a negative opinion of Clinton, versus 40 percent who have a positive view of her.
Republicans backing Trump’s rivals are even harsher about the GOP frontrunner: 56 percent of Cruz’s voters and 71 percent of Kasich’s have a negative view of Trump.









