What Voters Think About Hillary Clinton and Candidates' Health

Barbara Kinney for Hillary for America(WASHINGTON) — Politicians on all sides have weighed in on Hillary Clinton’s health incident over the weekend and now both she and Donald Trump have said that they will release more information about their health in the coming days and weeks.

While there has been political talk about how the candidates’ health disclosures could affect the presidential campaign, none of the polls have yet measured its importance for voters.

Informal conversations with a variety of voters show that, so far, many seem to be falling along party lines. Democrats supporting their nominee seem to believe that more is being made of the situation than it deserves, while Republicans seem to be calling for greater scrutiny and raising questions over the apparent secrecy of the Clinton campaign.

Butch Gudger, a Democrat who plans to vote for Trump, said that his concern over Clinton’s health comes as part of wider suspicion.

“I don’t think we know the whole picture. There’s more to the story and we don’t know everything,” Gudger told ABC News at a Trump rally in North Carolina on Monday. “I think that she can take a break, she should take a break. But I think there’s more to the story.”

Dennis McDowell, a fellow Trump supporter at the rally, said that the timeline of events lends itself to his similar suspicions.

“She was fine on Friday when she did that interview and then on Sunday, all of a sudden, she’s got pneumonia?” McDowell said, noting that he thinks her health issues are being downplayed.

“I can’t speculate on her health,” he said. “I think the press is trying to make it out to be something that it’s not.”

Clinton supporters seem to feel the incident has been overblown and the Trump campaign is using it to play into a narrative they established.

“I think that the Republican Party and Donald Trump [have] done a magnificent job of distracting the voters and convincing folks that their conspiracy theories that they’ve been putting out there for months … should be front page news,” said Chris Pumpelly, a 32-year-old political communications strategist in Kansas.

He added that now “we’re seeing evidence of something that possibly might be legitimate, everyone is preconditioned to think ‘Hey Donald Trump and the Republican’s narrative about Hillary Clinton’s health has been right all along!’”

The Clinton campaign “didn’t do themselves any favors” after Clinton’s incident on Sunday because they did not immediately release a comprehensive statement about the health scare, Pumpelly said.

“Immediate full disclosure is very important and they neglected to do that and now they are dealing with a bigger problem than they would have otherwise,” he said, noting that he sees no serious cause for concern about her ability to run a campaign or the country.

Others voters seem to take issue with both candidates failing to disclose complete medical information.

“There should be disclosures about presidential candidates’ health,” said David Kunhardt, a Clinton supporter in California. “I think she has done a better job at disclosing than the other guy and the other guy has proceeded with a comical representation of his health which adds up to a lie.”

Even some Republicans believe that medical disclosures about the candidates should be even-handed.

“If we’re requiring Hillary to get up there with a doctor, then Trump should get up there with a doctor,” said Chet Greenwood, a Trump supporter in Vermont.

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

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