Donald Trump’s Republican support holds firm in new poll

Real estate mogul still leads presidential race field on 24% support despite sexism row

Donald Trump speaking to the media after the first Republican presidential debate. A feud with Fox News moderator Megyn Kelly has failed to dent his popularity, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll. Photograph: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg
Donald Trump speaking to the media after the first Republican presidential debate. A feud with Fox News moderator Megyn Kelly has failed to dent his popularity, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll. Photograph: Andrew Harrer/Bloomberg

Donald Trump continued to defy the laws of political gravity on Monday as a Reuters/Ipsos poll found the real estate mogul holding on to a wide lead among Republicans in the US presidential race despite an acerbic debate and a feud with a female television anchor that have bolstered charges of sexism.

Mr Trump led the party’s 17-strong 2016 presidential field with the backing of 24 per cent of Republican voters, unchanged from before last Thursday’s televised debate.

His closest rival, former Florida governor Jeb Bush, trails at 12 per cent, down from 17 per cent before the debate. No other candidate earned more than 8 per cent in the online poll, conducted between the end of the debate and Sunday.

The reality television star has been under intense criticism for caustic comments about Fox News anchor Megyn Kelly during and after the debate, and was disinvited from a weekend gathering of conservative activists in Georgia after he said Kelly, who helped moderate the debate, had "blood coming out of her wherever".

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Mr Trump has been a focus of controversy since June, when he entered the race for the Republican nomination in the November 2016 election.

Harsh comments about Mexican immigrants drew widespread condemnation and prompted some business partners to sever ties, while his feud with Arizona senator John McCain, the party’s 2008 presidential nominee, has angered many party officials.

Brash style

But the drama has done little so far to dent Mr Trump’s appeal among less affluent, conservative-leaning voters who say his brash style is needed to shake up an overly cautious political system and that his vast wealth would help him resist corrupting influences.

"They want someone who's an outsider, who can upset the applecart," said Craig Robinson, a former political director of the Iowa Republican Party. "They're willing to deal with a less-than-perfect candidate if they believe it will actually change things in Washington. "

The online poll of 278 self-identified Republicans has a credibility interval of 6.7 percentage points.

Despite Mr Trump's outsider appeal, he fares no better against Democratic front-runner Hillary Clinton than other Republican candidates. In a head-to-head match-up, Mrs Clinton would beat Mr Trump by 43 per cent to 29 per cent, the poll found. Mrs Clinton would beat other Republican candidates such as Mr Bush, Florida senator Marco Rubio and Texas senator Ted Cruz, by similar margins.

The debate did little to change Republican voters’ opinions of Mr Trump, the poll found. One-third said they liked him more after the debate, one-third said they liked him less, and the remaining third said their opinions had not changed. – (Reuters)