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New York (Monmouth): Clinton 51, Sanders 39. (Original Post) Chichiri Apr 2016 OP
WOOHOO!! workinclasszero Apr 2016 #1
302 people is too small a sample. hrmjustin Apr 2016 #2
Not necessarily Stuckinthebush Apr 2016 #7
some stats... book_worm Apr 2016 #3
odd poll. too young, too conservative, too small sample geek tragedy Apr 2016 #4
Right now it's 48-36 so she's ahead by 12 book_worm Apr 2016 #5
with the Democratic party and union machine behind her, probably geek tragedy Apr 2016 #6

book_worm

(15,951 posts)
3. some stats...
Mon Apr 11, 2016, 03:08 PM
Apr 2016

Currently, 51% of likely Democratic primary voters in New York support Clinton compared to
39% who support Sanders. Another 9% do not have a candidate preference with just over a week to go
before the election.
The race is basically tied among non-Hispanic white primary voters (48% for Sanders and 46%
for Clinton), while Clinton enjoys a large lead among black, Hispanic and other voters (62% to 22%).
Clinton holds a significant advantage among voters age 50 and older (57% to 36%), while the race is
much closer among voters under 50 (45% for Clinton to 43% for Sanders).
Clinton earns similar levels of support across the state, including Manhattan and the Bronx
(52%), Brooklyn and Queens (48%), Staten Island and the metro suburbs of Nassau, Suffolk,
Westchester, Rockland, Orange, and Putnam counties (51%), and upstate New York (51%). Sanders
performs better upstate (44%) and in the metro suburbs (41%) than he does in Brooklyn/Queens (36%) or
Manhattan/Bronx (35%). However, 13% of primary voters in these four New York City boroughs say
they do not have a candidate preference.
“It is worth noting that a significant number of minority voters in New York City are undecided.
Based on past primaries, these should turn out to be Clinton voters, but Sanders is making an all-out
appeal for their support,” said Patrick Murray, director of the independent Monmouth University Polling
Institute.

 

geek tragedy

(68,868 posts)
4. odd poll. too young, too conservative, too small sample
Mon Apr 11, 2016, 03:08 PM
Apr 2016

the LV screening is appropriate though.

But no way Clinton only wins 48% in Brooklyn and Queens

book_worm

(15,951 posts)
5. Right now it's 48-36 so she's ahead by 12
Mon Apr 11, 2016, 03:12 PM
Apr 2016

but they say lots of undecideds and many of them are minorities who may (based on other states) end up voting for HRC.

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