In that way, Goolsbee is a typical Democrat. Even as the issue has continued to creep forward, Democrats don't really seem to care.

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Last month, NBC and the Wall Street Journal tacked a question on to a national poll, asking people what concerns they had about the candidates. Two issues were raised for both Clinton and Bernie Sanders. For Clinton, they were her ties to Wall Street and "her honesty and judgment related to her use of a private email server." For Sanders, they were his lack of foreign policy experience and that his proposals were "too far out of the mainstream."

Of those four things, the thing that was least concerning to people was the email server — even when you include the people who volunteered that they were worried about both of a candidate's issues.

And this was in a poll in which Sanders held a national lead.

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This runs contrary to the conventional thinking on the subject — that this is giving Democrats reservations about Clinton. And we can anticipate at least one rejoinder: What about Clinton's honesty problems overall?

This, too, is overblown. We noted after South Carolina that the much-covered gap in perceptions of honesty between Clinton and Sanders fell apart in a state where Clinton ran the table. We can expand that analysis outward, looking at all of the available exit and entrance poll data (via CNN), to compare how attitudes about honesty compare to actual voting.

The pollsters ask voters to pick from four qualities that they are most looking for in a candidate and then they match a person's vote with their stated quality preference. Both the number of people that identified honesty as their priority and the gap by which they preferred Sanders correlates strongly to the eventual vote outcome in each state — suggesting that there's not an innate distrust of Clinton, there's just more distrust of her in places that more strongly support her opponent.

Importantly, the same holds true for perceptions of experience. The more people value experience in a candidate and the more they view Clinton as the more experienced one, the more they vote for her.

There are two other qualities listed: electability and "cares about people like me." The former is much more commonly cited by Clinton fans; the latter, by Sanders ones.

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It's hard to figure out which direction the arrow points, but it seems much safer to assume that Bernie Sanders fans, asked to pick one of four areas they're concerned about, picked one of the two in which their candidate had an advantage. It is much more of a stretch to assume that voters, deeply worried about trust and therefore settling on Sanders, were relieved to hear that motivating factor included in the poll.