FBI Director James Comey said last week Clinton was "extremely
careless" in the handling of classified information but the
investigation found no evidence she or her colleagues intended to
violate laws.
The U.S. presidential race is tied going into the major parties' national conventions and Democrat Hillary Clinton has been damaged by the FBI investigation into her email use while secretary of state, a new opinion poll showed on Thursday.
The
New York Times/CBS News poll showed 67 percent of voters surveyed said
Clinton was not honest and trustworthy, up 5 percentage points from a
CBS poll conducted last month before the FBI made its findings public.
As Donald Trump
prepares to accept the Republican presidential nomination next week,
the poll showed him in a dead heat with Clinton in a general election
matchup. Each candidate drew 40 percent of the vote, compared with the 6
percentage point lead enjoyed by Clinton in last month's survey, the
poll showed.
The margin of error was 3 percentage
points in the CBS News/New York Times poll, which was conducted by
telephone July 8-12 among a random sample of 1,600 adults nationwide,
including 1,358 registered voters.
The survey showed 62 percent of voters surveyed distrust Trump as well.
"But
Mrs. Clinton's shifting and inaccurate explanations of her email
practices at the State Department appear to have resonated more deeply
with the electorate," the Times wrote.
FBI Director James Comey said last week Clinton was "extremely careless"
in the handling of classified information but the investigation found
no evidence she or her colleagues intended to violate laws.
The
Times/CBS poll echoes the finding of a Quinnipiac Poll released on
Wednesday that showed Trump pulling just ahead of Clinton in the
so-called swing states of Florida and Pennsylvania as the former U.S.
senator and first lady lost ground on honesty and moral standards.
In
contrast to the New York Times/CBS News poll, a Reuters/Ipsos online
opinion poll released on Tuesday showed Clinton leading Trump by 13
points at a national level, with 46 percent to Trump's 33 percent
support among likely voters. The election is on Nov. 8.
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