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Donald Trump the ‘clear frontrunner’ in Republican field after Iowa win, says Joe Biden – US politics live

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Ron DeSantis and Nikki Haley fail to gain traction as Donald Trump wins US’s first election contest of 2024

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Most Republicans at Iowa’s caucus said they felt Donald Trump would be fit for the White House even if he were convicted of a crime, an entrance poll has revealed.

About two-thirds of caucus-goers also said they did not believe Democratic president Joe Biden legitimately won the 2020 election (there is no evidence of widespread fraud in that election, in which Biden won both the electoral college and popular vote), according to the poll.

66% said they did not think Biden legitimately won the presidency in 2020.

65% said they decided who to support in the presidential nomination contest before this month.

65% said Trump would still be fit to be president if he were convicted of a crime. 31% said he would be unfit if convicted.

61% said they favor a federal law that would ban abortions nationwide.

53% of white caucus-goers who considered themselves evangelical or born-again Christians supported Trump, while 27% backed DeSantis.

46% of voters said they considered themselves part of the Maga movement, a reference to Trump’s Make America Great Again slogan. 50% said they were not part of that movement.

Trump led Nikki Haley and Ron DeSantis by double digits among men and women alike. But among college graduates Trump was preferred by about 37% of caucus-goers, compared to 28% for Haley and 26% for DeSantis.

38% percent of caucus-goers said the economy was the issue that mattered most in deciding who to vote for on Monday, compared to 34% who cited immigration, while the rest cited foreign policy or abortion.

14% said the most important quality a Republican presidential nominee should have is the ability to beat Biden, compared to 41% who said shared values mattered most.

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