WASHINGTON – Even as Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton holds a growing lead in the presidential race among Minnesota voters, a majority of them say she has not been fully truthful about her use of private e-mail as secretary of state, a new Star Tribune Minnesota Poll has found.
Statewide, 54 percent said they don't believe she has been honest about the extent of her use of private e-mail. Even in the Democratic strongholds of Hennepin and Ramsey counties, 49 percent say she has not been truthful, compared with 41 percent who say she has. Voters in greater Minnesota and outer ring Twin Cities suburbs have less confidence in what Clinton has disclosed.
Concern about the State Department e-mails is part of a broader set of trust issues still facing Clinton in the closing days of the presidential campaign, along with recent revelations about her paid speeches and private campaign e-mails that were hacked and made public by WikiLeaks.
Yet, that concern extends only so far. Asked whether Clinton should be in jail for the private e-mail use as secretary of state, as Republican nominee Donald Trump has repeatedly said, 60 percent of those polled said his comments are inappropriate. Another 33 percent said Trump is right to press for jail.
The Minnesota Poll found that income is the most vivid dividing line on the issue of Clinton and trust.
Among those who earn more than $50,000, 62 percent said she is not being honest when it comes to her e-mails. Only 25 percent from that group said she has shared all she knows.
Among those who earned less, 48 percent said they think she is truthful on the subject and 38 percent did not.
As secretary of state, Clinton sent and received thousands of e-mails from a personal server — hundreds of which were classified. In August, FBI Director James Comey recommended no criminal charges against Clinton, but called her use of private e-mails "extremely careless."