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Hillary-Clinton-Bernie-Sanders-Iowa-Caucus

Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, at the at the Holiday Inn on Feb. 1, 2016 in Des Moines, Iowa, while Hillary Clinton, right, speaks on the evening of the Iowa Democratic caucus, Feb. 1, 2016. (Photo: Joshua Lott/Getty Images/AP)

The presumed Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton now trails Vermont socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders nationally for the first time, according to a new FOX Poll. Mrs. Clinton, the former secretary of state and first lady, fell behind Sanders by three points, 47% to 44%.

The small lead Sanders holds over Clinton is within the poll’s 4.5% margin of error.

“One thing that is clear from our poll — and others — is that Clinton has been losing support and Sanders has been gaining,” says Democratic pollster Chris Anderson. “And this process appears to have accelerated since the contests in Iowa and New Hampshire.”

However, according to PPD’s senior political analyst, there are some questionable findings in the poll.

“For starters, the polls says voters by a 54% to 39% margin say they prefer the next president ‘to have experience in politics’ rather than ‘be from outside the political establishment’,” Baris said. “Polls are certainly helpful. But the real poll that matters is on election day, which doesn’t suggest this sample is very representative of voters going to the polls this year.”

Sanders also trounces the potential GOP nominees, including the frontrunner Donald Trump by 53% to 38%. Clinton holds a smaller five-point lead over Trump, 47% to 42%. Republican pollster Daron Shaw, who conducts the FOX Poll jointly with Mr. Anderson, suggested blue-collar Democrats “have been a major source of Clinton’s defection” in the wake of a near-loss in Iowa and pummeling in New Hampshire.

“Historically, lesser-known candidates beating establishment candidates in early contests have seen the biggest boost in their national support,” Shaw said.

But that finding is problematic and simply doesn’t match the voting results and exit polls from the early states, according to Baris. It’s not just demographics, but discrepancies in the raw vote and turnout.

“Clinton’s remaining strength among whites is almost solely with working-class, blue-collar whites,” Baris says. “The remaining whites are voting for Donald Trump, as was the case in both Iowa and New Hampshire. Where do they think all these new, record-breaking numbers for the GOP are coming from?”

According to recent aggregated and published data from People’s Pundit Daily, which took party affiliation and ideology data from the latter half of 2015 to 2016, the Republican Party has a distinct edge in the battleground states, including a nearly 9-point lead in the Granite State and 3.3 in the Hawkeye State. While national numbers skew the Democratic advantage due to the high number of voters in large population centers and states, we still wouldn’t expect such a large margin for Sanders.

“Bernie Sanders has shown he is no Barack Obama at the polls,” Baris says. “He is driving turnout among younger voters, but not at the levels seen in 2008 or 2012. That’s simply a reality, not a hypothetical in a survey.”

A recent Quinnipiac University Poll shows a tight race with Clinton still leading by 2%, 44% to 42%, with all the potential GOP candidates in a statistical dead heat with both Clinton and Sanders. A Suffolk University USAToday Poll found Trump leading both Democratic contenders, with most of the GOP candidates competitive or leading.

Clinton still leads Sanders on the PPD aggregate average of national Democratic nomination polls by 8 points.

Meanwhile, if Clinton isn’t indictment for mishandling classified information while serving as secretary of state–which 60% say put the national security of the U.S. at risk– half of voters, 50%, believe it will be because President Obama is protecting her. Forty-one percent (41%) say it will be because there isn’t proof she committed a crime.

The Democratic frontrunner Hillary Clinton now trails

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Pope Francis takes the stage at the Festival of Families in Philadelphia on Sept. 26, 2015, and a Syrian refugee yells at a Hungarian border guard. (Photos: AP/Alessandra Tarantino/Reuters)

In an hour-long inflight news conference on his way from Juarez to Rome, Pope Francis said Donald Trump was “not Christian if he” “thinks only about building walls” and not bridges. The Republican frontrunner called his comments “not very nice” and “a disgrace,” pointing out the Vatican City is completely enclosed by walls and how it is ISIS’s top target.

The Islamist army has made multiple execution videos vowing to attack and takeover the Vatican, as well as other European powers via mass immigration, or Civilization Jihad.

“If and when the Vatican is attacked by ISIS, which as everyone knows is ISIS’s ultimate trophy, I can promise you that the Pope would have only wished and prayed that Donald Trump would have been President because this would not have happened,” Trump said in a statement. “ISIS would have been eradicated unlike what is happening now with our all talk, no action politicians.”

Here is the full question and answer:

Phil Pullella, Reuters: Today, you spoke very eloquently about the problems of immigration. On the other side of the border, there is a very tough electoral battle. One of the candidates for the White House, Republican Donald Trump, in an interview recently said that you are a political man and he even said that you are a pawn, an instrument of the Mexican government for migration politics. Trump said that if he’s elected, he wants to build 2,500 kilometers of wall along the border. He wants to deport 11 million illegal immigrants, separating families, etcetera. I would like to ask you, what do you think of these accusations against you and if a North American Catholic can vote for a person like this?

Pope Francis: Thank God he said I was a politician because Aristotle defined the human person as ‘animal politicus.’ At least I am a human person. As to whether I am a pawn, well, maybe, I don’t know. I’ll leave that up to your judgment and that of the people. And then, a person who thinks only about building walls, wherever they may be, and not building bridges, is not Christian. This is not in the Gospel. As far as what you said about whether I would advise to vote or not to vote, I am not going to get involved in that. I say only that this man is not Christian if he has said things like that. We must see if he said things in that way and in this I give the benefit of the doubt.

Mr. Pullella wasn’t exactly honest in his question and, despite perhaps once again going overboard, at least Pope Francis gave Trump “the benefit of the doubt.” Whether Republican primary voters agree with The Donald or not, or rather support him or not, the response is nearly unanimous in his favor. In fairness, here is the rest of the Trump’s response.

The Mexican government and its leadership has made many disparaging remarks about me to the Pope, because they want to continue to rip off the United States, both on trade and at the border, and they understand I am totally wise to them. The Pope only heard one side of the story – he didn’t see the crime, the drug trafficking and the negative economic impact the current policies have on the United States. He doesn’t see how Mexican leadership is outsmarting President Obama and our leadership in every aspect of negotiation.

For a religious leader to question a person’s faith is disgraceful. I am proud to be a Christian and as President I will not allow Christianity to be consistently attacked and weakened, unlike what is happening now, with our current President. No leader, especially a religious leader, should have the right to question another man’s religion or faith. They are using the Pope as a pawn and they should be ashamed of themselves for doing so, especially when so many lives are involved and when illegal immigration is so rampant.

You might have noticed that Pope Francis didn’t exactly argue the point he is being used as a pawn. But that’s not the only controversial statement he made. He also told Catholic lawmakers it is okay to support gay marriage, which will no doubt have the Vatican City up-in-arms upon his arrival.

Donald Trump responded to Pope Francis suggesting

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Donald Trump speaks at a rally in Greenville, South Carolina, on February 15, 2016.

Donald Trump has widened his lead among veterans in South Carolina after he said in Greenville President George W. Bush lied to the U.S. before the Iraq War. A new FOX Poll finds Trump leading his closest rival Texas Sen. Ted Cruz 32% to 19% among likely Republican voters in South Carolina, with Marco Rubio coming in third at 15%.

Veterans, a small but roughly 60,000-strong subgroup of voters, back Trump 37% to 22% over Cruz, with Rubio (15%) and Bush (9%) trailing far behind. Trump also leads among both men (35%) and women (28%).

While Trump did fall from 35% to 32% in the FOX Poll since December, he leads by nearly 17% on the have been abysmal of South Carolina Republican primary polls and currently has nearly an 80% chance of victory on Saturday. A new Bloomberg/Selzer Poll, which is rated higher than the FOX Poll on the PPD Pollster Scorecard, found Trump with a larger 19-point lead.

Trump’s supporters (83%), as was the case in New Hampshire, are significantly more firm and likely to vote than either Cruz’s (73%), Rubio’s (71%) or the Republican primary electorate, as a whole (74%).

“In order for Cruz to beat Trump in the Palmetto State, he will have to run up the margins in what we call the Northern Up-Country, where there is a large evangelical Christians vote,” said PPD’s senior political analyst Rich Baris. “The fundamental problem Cruz has is that Trump is beating him among these voters and will destroy him in the eastern coastal and central counties.”

Indeed, among the 60% of evangelicals voting in the South Carolina Republican primary, Trump beats Cruz by 8 points, 31% to 23%, respectively. Rubio receives 17% and Bush 10%, at least in the FOX Poll.

“The bottom line is that South Carolina looks like it is voting more like New Hampshire than Iowa,” Baris said. “If these numbers hold, we’ll be able to call this one early.”

In a powerful moment on the campaign trail earlier this week, Trump received an impromptu endorsement from an Iraq War veteran while campaigning in North Augusta, South Carolina.

Donald Trump has widened his lead among

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A worker in the mid-Atlantic manufacturing sector works with raw aluminum materials. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve’s Manufacturing Business Outlook Survey continued to show mid-atlantic manufacturing in contraction in February. The Philadelphia Fed said its index of general business activity covering the region rose to -2.8 from -3.5 in January, marking the sixth straight month of contraction.

Economists surveyed by The Wall Street Journal expected a decline to -4.0.

mid-atlantic manufacturing business outlook survey

“The survey’s labor market indicators suggest continued weak employment conditions,” the report said. “The employment index decreased 3 points, from -1.9 to -5.0. About 63 percent of the firms reported no change in employment this month, and the percentage reporting decreases (20 percent) was slightly larger than the percentage reporting increases (15 percent).”

“While there was an increase in shipments pushed the index up this month, the remaining indexes showed weakened conditions. The new orders subindex fell at a faster pace than in January, just as the number of hours employees worked continued to decline.

The Philadelphia Federal Reserve's Manufacturing Business Outlook

NBC News/Wall Street Journal Poll is an Outlier, Totally Bogus

Ted Cruz SC AP

Texas Sen. Ted Cruz speaks to the crowd during a Conservative Leadership Project presidential forum in Columbia, South Carolina, on Friday, January 15, 2016. (Photo: AP Photo/Sean Rayford)

A new “bombshell” NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll taken after the Republican debate last Saturday showed Sen. Ted Cruz ahead of Donald Trump, 28% to 26%. It set off a massive public relations push by the Texas senator and had most mediates scratching their heads, though still taking the opportunity to slam the frontrunner with headlines like “Ted on Top!”

Prior to the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll, Trump led by 11 points on the have been abysmal of national polls and in more than 30 consecutive polls since November. With a trend line so dominate, it would probably have been wise for the media to proceed with caution. However, candidates, are a whole other story.

“For the first time in many months, there’s a new national frontrunner on the Republican side,” Cruz touted while kicking off a rally at a prep school gymnasium in South Carolina.

That’s flat-out nonsense, but most campaigns are expected to hype nonsense. In reality, the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll is an outlier, and totally bogus.

The two pollsters–Republican pollster Bill McInturff, who conducts the survey with Democratic pollster Peter Hart–have consistently missed the mark as it relates to the average and Trump’s strength among primary voters. Notice how McInturff, who released no serious or transparent cross-tab data, qualified his polling results.

“When you see a number this different, it means you might be right on top of a shift in the campaign. What you don’t know yet is if the change is going to take place or if it is a momentary ‘pause’ before the numbers snap back into place,” he said.

I’m just going to say it: This smells like crap to me. Pollsters who honestly find extraordinary results frequently hold back surveys until they can be confirmed by duplicating them and, if those results are duplicated, they are expected and do produce internal cross-tabs and other data sets to be scrutinized by pundits such as myself and others. I suspected this to be the case as soon as the survey was released yesterday.

The most recent survey conducted by Quinnipiac University (PPD Pollster Scorecard: B+ Rating) showed Trump leading Cruz, his closest rival, by 20 points. More importantly, considering the poll was conducted from 2/10 to 2/15, there was no deterioration in Trump’s support nationwide in the interviews after the debate on Saturday.

“Reports of Donald Trump’s imminent demise as a candidate are clearly and greatly exaggerated. Like a freight train barreling through signals with his horn on full blast, Trump heads down the track towards a possible nomination,” said Tim Malloy, assistant director of the Quinnipiac University Poll.

Mr. Malloy is actually being quite generous to the rest of the GOP field, according to our estimates on the PPD Election Projection Model. Trump has nearly an 80% chance of victory in South Carolina Republican primary on Saturday, where he holds a 17% average lead with an electorate that will be far more favorable to Mr. Cruz than it is nationwide.

Sen. Cruz, on the other hand, has only a 7%–that’s right, seven percent–chance to pull off an upset. As we previously explained, Sen. Marco Rubio has a far better chance of taking the Palmetto State than Cruz, though he trails him slightly in the state.

Nevertheless, with new data in hand, which shows Trump holding his commanding lead have been abysmal and in the voting states, I’ve confirmed my suspicion and the NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll will be penalized on the PPD Pollster Scorecard for releasing what is a clear outlier poll days before a primary while offering zero evidence to back it up.

Pundit’s Perspective

What Donald Trump has done in this race is both unprecedented and extraordinary. As we’ve explained over-and-over, at least at the moment, Ted Cruz fundamentally cannot win because his “courageous conservatives” are voting for Trump. Unless we see strong evidence to contradict a six-month trend, or the other candidates drop out–preferably as early as before the South Carolina Republican primary and no later than the Nevada Republican caucus–Donald J. Trump will hold his lead and is highly likely to win the Republican nomination.

Period.

If so-called real conservatives and Republicans like Mr. McInturff (because those who support Trump are fake I guess) really want to defeat the billionaire real estate mogul, they will stop with the BS attempts to trick or discourage primary voters and take my advice. The sooner they realize they have completely lost control of the status quo, the more honest this business will become.

The "bombshell" NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll

Weekly-Jobless-Claims-Graphic

Weekly Jobless Claims Graphic. Number of Americans applying for first-time jobless benefits.

The Labor Department said on Thursday that weekly jobless claims fell by 7,000 to 262,000 last week, lower than the estimate for 275,000. The prior week was unchanged at 269,000.

A Labor Department analyst said there were no special factors impacting this week’s initial claims.

The four-week moving average of claims–which is widely considered a better measure of labor market trends as it irons out week-to-week volatility–fell 8,000 to 273,250 last week.

The highest insured unemployment rates in the week ending January 30 were in Alaska (4.7), West Virginia (3.7), New Jersey (3.4), Montana (3.3), Pennsylvania (3.3), Connecticut (3.0), Wyoming (3.0), Illinois (2.9), Puerto Rico (2.9), and Rhode Island (2.9).

The largest increases in initial claims for the week ending February 6 were in Texas (+1,674), Rhode Island (+783), Florida (+419), Michigan (+385), and Virginia (+370), while the largest decreases were in Illinois (-5,503), Tennessee (- 3,067), Pennsylvania (-2,284), Maryland (-1,911), and Ohio (-1,695).

The Labor Department said on Thursday that

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Vermont Socialist Sen. Bernie Sanders, left, and billionaire real estate mogul Donald Trump, right. (Photos: AP/Getty)

In politics, the “dog whistle” is coded language designed to delight a targeted subgroup and pass over the heads of everyone else. Other terms, such as “establishment,” “Washington insider” and “free trade,” are not quite full-grown dog whistles. Let’s call them puppy whistles.

These are expressions whose meanings remain vague. For the puppy whistle, the vaguer the better.

Both Donald Trump and Bernie Sanders rail against “the establishment.” This is a way of saying that they are not favored by the traditional leaders of their parties — the leaders said to have let us down.

“Establishment” is hard to define, and when you do, it’s sometimes carries positive feelings. Who among us wouldn’t be impressed by a plumber’s ad reading, “The Wrench Brothers, Established in 1971”?

On the left, “the establishment” is itself a highly established term. It gained steam in the 1960s as a designation for the adults who messed things up for us kids. Sanders uses it as pure pejorative.

When Planned Parenthood and the Human Rights Fund endorsed Hillary Clinton, Sanders responded, “Hillary Clinton has been around there for a very, very long time, and some of these groups are, in fact, part of the establishment.”

Clinton’s unfortunate comeback was that no one would be less establishment than the first woman president.

Harvard political scientist Danielle Allen then wrote a piece in The Washington Post titled, “Sorry, Hillary: You are the establishment.” She never explains why, uh, Hillary should be sorry for that — or more basically, why being part of the establishment is necessarily bad. The National Audubon Society has been around for 111 years. Is that any reason to hold it in low regard?

Allen offers this line: “Bernie Sanders is right that Clinton’s long list of endorsements represents her muscle within the Democratic Party.” That may be so, but if President Obama had that kind of muscle, we’d probably now have a government-run public option on the federal health insurance marketplace.

“Washington insider” is a puppy whistle favored by populists across the spectrum. It’s No. 2 on the right’s list of condemnations (after liberal).

The coded meaning is that long-time Washington politicians become servants of lobbyists. It really shouldn’t matter how long a politician has worked in Washington but rather what the politician has done in Washington.

“Free trade” has long held negative meaning for populists in both parties. The left continues to use NAFTA — the North American Free Trade Agreement — as almost a curse word, as the cause of devastating losses among our manufacturing workers. But how many sweatshirts in your closet were made in Mexico? Go into Home Depot and see where the hammers, screws and lighting fixtures come from.

On the Republican side, Trump rails against Chinese imports. At least he knows where most of those jobs have gone.

The consensus among economists is that NAFTA provided modest benefits for the U.S., as well as for Mexico and Canada. Some American jobs did move to Mexico, but many would have otherwise gone to Asia. The remedy for victims of globalization is not to stop the unstoppable but to strengthen their social safety net.

The Trans-Pacific Partnership is the new trade boogeyman. Its purpose is to strengthen America’s hand in dealing with China, but that gets lost in the political discourse.

Trade agreements tend to be a mixed bag in terms of who benefits. They are not inherently evil. Likewise, so-called political establishments and Washington insiders should be judged by what they do, rather than what they are. But gray is an unpopular color in campaign season.

In politics, the "dog whistle" is coded

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Justice Antonin Scalia in 2010.

When the sad news came of the sudden death this past weekend of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia, I wept for my friend.

We had developed a happy friendship during the past 15 years, one which I had selfishly hoped would endure. He permitted his friends to see all of him. We knew him to be in private just as he appeared in public — happy, loud, brash, warm, engaging, challenging, witty, brilliant, courageous, Catholic, traditionalist. He also let us know that he understood the significant role history gave him. Knowing him personally and spending private time with him was one of the great gifts of my adult life. In my heart, there is a great sense of loss.

Regrettably, in the nation there is a sense of loss for the Constitution as well.

Justice Scalia was the most aggressive and consistent defender on the Supreme Court of the primacy of the text of the Constitution in the post-World War II era. He was the modern-day progenitor of the idea — and eventually the jurisprudence — of interpreting the Constitution faithful to the plain meaning of its words. He was utterly and unambiguously faithful to this concept. This theory of constitutional interpretation has two names — textualism and originalism.

Justice Scalia argued that the Constitution means what it says; its says it is the supreme law of the land; and all American judges have taken an solemn oath to be subject to what it says. It is superior to the jurists who interpret it. It is what is says, not as they might wish it say. Thus, all judges are bound by the text. Hence the word “textualism.”

So “no law” means no law. “Due process” guarantees fair process, not substance. A constitutional guarantee is a real guarantee. The exercise of rights articulated in the Constitution cannot be subject to popularity contests.

If the text of the Constitution is ambiguous, it then becomes the duty of the jurist to ascertain the original public meaning of the words that form the ambiguity. Hence the word “originalism.” Ascertaining original public meaning often requires the skills of a historian; yet, thanks to James Madison, the historical record is ample.

The rejection of this line of thinking permits jurists to interpret the Constitution in novel and creative or even destructive ways, according to their own ideologies. It permits them to adapt a meaning in the text that they wish had been there to fortify contemporary societal attitudes. Justice Scalia argued that that is not the job of jurists.

Federal judges have life tenure because they represent the anti-democratic part of the federal government. Their job is to preserve constitutional norms and structures and guarantees from interference by the popular branches of the federal government or the States, even when those branches or the States command popular support.

The job of the jurist, he argued, is not to adapt the text of the Constitution to public trends or cultural changes. That is the job of the Congress and the States through legislation.

His textualism/originalism arguments provoked a firestorm of opposition on the Court and in the legal academy. The opposition reacted and coalesced around a concept called the “living Constitution.” Its tenets are that modern-day jurists can adapt the Constitution to modern-day societal preferences and governmental needs.

Justice Scalia argued that that itself violates the judicial oath, which is to uphold the Constitution as it was written, not as some jurists may wish it to be. Only three quarters of the States, he maintained, can change the Constitution — by amendment — and they have done so only 27 times in the past 225 years.
Some justices throughout history have been compromisers and conciliators. Not Justice Scalia. He was a lion of textual orthodoxy. He was a rock of original meaning. Law students jokingly called him the pope of originalism, a phrase he loved.

This steadfast attitude about the proper judicial role on the Court led him to author staunch defenses of the right to life even in the womb, free speech even when hateful, private property even when it is in the government’s way, the right to confront one’s accusers at trial even when unpleasant, the right to keep and bear arms in the home even if locally prohibited, and the right to privacy in “persons, houses, papers, and effects.”

He famously voted to limit privacy to those four areas because of his fidelity to the text of the Constitution, which articulates persons, houses, papers and effects as the areas immune from government intrusion without a proper search warrant. He believed that if those areas are to be expanded, it is for the States to expand them by amendment, not for the Court to do so based on a wish list.

In the early days of our friendship, I was a bit awed by him. I once asked him if he felt he belonged to the Court. His reply was short and blunt. He told me he belonged to the Roman Catholic Church, he belonged to his family, and he belonged to the Constitution. The Court, he said, was just one creature intended to preserve, protect and defend the Constitution. The Constitution is the Court’s creator. No creature can be greater than its creator. He liked the Court. He loved the Constitution.

Now he is with the Creator of us all. Now he belongs to the ages.

Judge Andrew Napolitano: When the sad news

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South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley and Florida Sen. Marco Rubio. (Photo: Getty Images)

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley endorsed Florida Sen. Marco Rubio ahead of the state’s Republican primary and only weeks after admitting he supports amnesty. The endorsement also comes just one day after the governor said she was gearing up to endorse “anyone but Trump,” the national frontrunner currently leading on the PPD average of South Carolina Republican primary polls by nearly 20 points.

“I’m a military wife of a combat veteran,” Haley said at a Rubio rally in Chapin, a town outside the capital Columbia. “I want a president who is going to have the backs of military veterans and those on active duty.”

Haley also indirectly criticized Trump in what many called a cheap shot in her response to President Barack Obama’s final State of the Union speech. Haley tried to clarify that there are also other areas where she doesn’t see eye to eye with other Republican candidates.

“I have disagreements with other presidential candidates,” Haley said. “Marco Rubio believes in amnesty, which I don’t. There’s lots of things.”

However, Gov. Haley quickly walked back the statement in an interview with Fox News.

“I’m against his Gang of Eight bill. He is not for amnesty, but I was against his Gang of Eight bill,” she said, referring to the amnesty bill backed by Rubio in the Senate. The bill sparked an all-out revolt before the 2014 midterm elections among the base and the bill was defeated.

“It’s been a long couple of days,” she said. “What I said was that I didn’t agree with him — I meant what I didn’t agree with him was on the Gang of Eight bill. I said that he wasn’t for amnesty. That’s not what I meant. What I meant was that he supported the Gang of Eight bill and I did not.”

It is unclear whether the endorsement from Haley will do much to help Rubio in the final days of the campaign before the voting starts on Saturday. He had already secured most of the power players in the Palmetto State, including the very popular Sen. Tim Scott and Rep. Trey Gowdy, the chair of the House Select Committee on Benghazi.

Nevertheless, according to the PPD Election Projection Model, Trump has a 76% chance of winning the South Carolina Republican primary on Saturday.

South Carolina Gov. Nikki Haley endorsed Florida

homebuilder-housing-reuters

Homebuilders and construction in the housing market. (PHOTO: REUTERS)

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday housing starts fell 3.8% to an annual rate of 1.099 million in January, missing estimates for 1.170 million. Building permits, indicate future activity, came in at 1.202 million. Economists polled by Reuters estimated 1.200 million.

In January, single-family housing starts, which is the largest segment of the market, fell 3.9% to a 731,000-unit pace.

Building permits dipped 0.2% to a 1.202 million-unit rate last month. Permits for the construction of single-family homes fell 1.6% last month. Multi-family building permits increased 2.1%.

The Commerce Department reported Wednesday housing starts

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