New polling tonight. Significant gains it seems for trump. What exactly is changing . It is tighter, anderson. And we should not be surprised. Remember the country weve live in the last 20 years. It should not be surprising if this race gets tight into the end. A new poll Shows Hillary clinton up just three points. When you average out the most recent National Polls we have Hillary Clinton with six points leading. Down from eight or nine just a few days ago because the new polls coming out show a tighter race. Some of the state polls get more interesting. And you say does donald trump have a chance as we have 12 more days essentially of campaigning . Look at these numbers in florida. Other polls have shown secretary clinton ahead in florida in recent days. A new poll trump up. Does seem to indicate some trump momentum. In a state he absolutely has to win. And anderson when you look closer into this bloomberg poll, tells you a lot about the challenge for candidates heading into the fina
Jason carroll, thanks so much. Donald trump did have a new policy proposal. Term limits for members of congress. Hes calling for a constitutional amendment. It would take a constitutional amendment that would restrict members to six years of service, senators, 12 years. On monday, they proposed an ethics on when the executive branch leave office. Cnn has learned new details about Donald Trumps preparation for the final debate. A source tells us that rnc chair Reince Priebus played the moderators with new Jersey Governor Chris Christie playing Hillary Clinton. This is a bit of a change doing mock scenarios. We had been told in the first debate, he did not do this. Did not want to do this, apparently coming in nor prepared. Hillary clinton, shes been off the Campaign Trail for several days, raising money and preparing for tonights debate. In the very first debate she
seemed to be trying to bait trump. At 9 00 p. M. Eastern, she is expected to employ a different strategy, according to cnn
republicans are responsible for more of this false information than democrats are. can you talk through what you found there? my goal going into this was to determine, you know, how common misinformation was in campaign e-mails. fund raising e-mails specifically. and whether you know, there were partisan patterns in terms of who was doing it. and what i found was that roughly 15% of e-mails i received from republicans contained false information and by that, i m referring to you know, impeerically false statements. things that can be proven not to be true. not the standard political exaggerations, but actually false statements were in about 15% of republican e-mails compared with about 2% of
and do you think it s a tactic that other states should adopt as well on other issues? you re here to see what the product is of the governor, the attorney general and legislature, but i approach this through the lens of a father. i remember the shooting in sandy hook and rushing to my son s school to give him a big hug. senator padilla of california, thank you for being back on the show. appreciate your time this afternoon. political misinformation. you know it s on your phone screen, your tvs. it s now even coming to your e-mail addresses. new reporting from the new york times taking a look at thousands of those campaign e-mails. many of them littered with bad information. reporters for the times subscribed to nearly 400 campaign e-mail lists and they
term and a month-long attack by iran. among the hacked victims members the trump campaign. if undetected they would have successfully infiltrated these e-mail accounts of these key individuals. and from there they could either extract information, just espionage, or they could use their control of those accounts to launch attacks on others. election security has been a political football ever since the 2016 race. when russia tried everything to influence the outcome. hacking campaign e-mails, spreading disinformation, and trying to change actual votes. states are gearing up for another cyber onslaught. harding defenses, adding a paper trail, and vote audits. but experts say systems are still too vulnerable. there are thousands of small jurisdictions across the country that know for fact they need to improve their security and improve their accountability. a democratic bill that would give state $600 million to help them modernize, past the house, but stalled and the republican-