FiveThirtyEight
Hayley Munguia

Bobby Jindal is positioning himself as the only candidate who will actually get rid of Obamacare — that’s a smart move. A September Rasmussen poll found that 52 percent of voters, regardless of party, have an unfavorable view of the law, and 37 percent advocated for repealing it and starting again from scratch. Break it down to just Republicans, and just 17 percent have a favorable view of the Affordable Care Act, while 54 percent of likely GOP voters want to repeal the law.
Farai Chideya

Harry and Jody: Agreed that Christie is doing well on this stage. He has more elbow-room in the undercard debate than he did on the main stage. And with Trump not around, he’s decisively won the “who’s got the big personality” contest of the night. (Co-sign re: his constant refs to Clinton.) So: Will he end up back on the big stage? The next GOP debate isn’t until Dec 15.
Leah Libresco

If Jindal seemed to be shilly-shallying on the Trans-Pacific Partnership deal, saying that he needed to read it before he made up his mind, he had good reason to soft-pedal. Republicans have mixed feelings, with a plurality (43 percent) saying that the deal is good for the U.S., 34 percent saying it’s bad, and 16 percent in Jindal’s camp, saying they don’t know.

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