Poll: Clinton's lead over Sanders grows
Hillary Clinton's lead in the Democratic presidential primary race has
grown
-- and if Vice President Joe Biden decides to stay out of the race, her numbers
would rise even higher, a new CNN/ORC poll shows.
Clinton is backed by 42% of Democratic primary voters
nationally, compared to 24% for Vermont Sen. Bernie Sanders, 22% for Biden and
1% for former Maryland Gov. Martin O'Malley.
That's a marked improvement over
an early September CNN/ORC poll that found Clinton leading Sanders, 37% to 27%,
with Biden at 20%.
And Biden's support comes almost
entirely from Clinton's camp. Without the vice president in the race, Clinton's
numbers climb by 15 percentage points, while Sanders' increase by only 4 points
-- giving Clinton a nearly 2-to-1 lead at 57% to 28%, with O'Malley moving up
to 2%.
While Clinton has led national
polls, she has been found trailing in New Hampshire and at times in Iowa -- two
key early voting states. And her downward trend nationally -- amid questions
about her use of a private email server during her tenure as President Barack
Obama's secretary of state -- has fuelled speculation of a late Biden entry,
and provided the vice president with an opening even as he grieves the death of
his son Beau Biden.
Biden is still mulling a
potential bid.
The poll surveyed 392 Democrats and independents who lean
toward the Democratic Party from September 17-19 and has a margin of error of
plus or minus 5 points.
Courtesy: Eric Bradner, CNN
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