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NY democratic primary polls: Clinton, Trump maintain double-digit leads over rivals – Details

She still has to beat Sanders in her own race before she can fully pivot to the general election.As previously reported by the Inquisitr, Bernie Sanders confirmed that’s exactly what it means in a panel discussion at the Harlem Apollo Theater. “There seems to be a growing level of anxiety in that campaign, which I hope doesn’t spill over into the way that his supporters treat other people”, she said.

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“The younger voters are feeling the Bern, but the question is will they come out and vote in large numbers as older voters historically do?” said Siena pollster Steven Greenberg.

Spencer Thayer, the activist who created the online database of superdelegate contact information, told The Washington Post his site is not affiliated with the Sanders campaign, though he described the Vermont senator as “irrefutably a better candidate than Hillary Clinton”.

Sanders’ senior adviser, Tad Devine, said in an interview that Sanders welcomes the opportunity to discuss his foreign policy agenda and his plans for breaking up big banks. But the Daily News editorial will help her shore up – and perhaps expand – that support. The Guardian reports that at a rally on Monday in Irvine, California, Ted Cruz insinuated that he’d send Hillary Clinton to jail if he were elected president.

Meanwhile, a new Siena College poll shows Trump backed by only 50 percent of likely Republican voters, followed by 27 percent for Kasich and 17 percent for Cruz.

Clinton’s Bay State favorability rating dropped 6 points, to 46 percent, compared to the institute’s October poll, and her unfavorability rose 5 points to 46 percent.

Clinton is ahead of Sanders 52 percent to 42 percent among likely Democratic voters, the poll found; in March, Siena had Clinton at 55 percent and Sanders at 34 percent.

Hillary Clinton is largely expected to end her seven-state losing streak with a win in NY.

While Trump holds a 14-point lead over Cruz with men, women voters supported the three candidates equally at 28 percent.

The Associated Press has not declared Trump the victor because Cruz has not ruled out a recount.

A Quinnipiac poll Tuesday showed Clinton had a 53 percent to 40 percent lead, aided by support of 65 percent of African-American voters.

To be true, this is not the only poll that predicts a double digit lead for former secretary of state.

Regarding Clinton, Vercellotti said, “The race for the Democratic nomination may be taking a toll on voters’ views of her”.

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The AP-GfK Poll of 1,076 adults was conducted online March 31-April 4, using a sample drawn from GfK’s probability-based KnowledgePanel, which is created to be representative of the USA population. A whopping 69 percent of Americans have an unfavorable view of Republican leader Donald Trump, and just 26 percent have a favorable opinion. The margin of sampling error for all respondents is plus or minus 3.3 percentage points.

Democratic presidential candidate Sen. Bernie Sanders I-Vt. speaks at a campaign rally Tuesday