Source: NBC
In the wake of the first two nominating contests, Hillary Clinton is
maintaining her lead over Bernie Sanders nationally in the past week,
dropping a single percentage point to 50 percent. Sanders picked up a
point to lower the difference to 10 points among Democratic and
Democratic-leaning voters.
Although the numbers have remained relatively
stable, the national margin between Clinton and Sanders is now at the
lowest it has been in 7 weeks. These results are from the latest NBC
News|SurveyMonkey Weekly Election Tracking poll conducted online from
Feb 8-14 among a national sample of 13,129 adults including 11,417 who
are registered to vote.
After a 22-point victory for Sanders in New
Hampshire last Tuesday, a third of Democratic and Democratic-leaning
voters now think Sanders will win the eventual nomination. However, 66
percent still think Clinton will win. This 34-point margin is down from
44 points just last week and is the smallest it has been since the
beginning of our tracking poll in January.
Though Sanders may have gained momentum from his
virtual tie with Clinton in Iowa and his large victory in New
Hampshire, the candidates have rapidly shifted their focus to the next
Democratic contests: a caucus in Nevada on Feb. 20 and a primary in
South Carolina on the 27th. These are the first states where the
Democratic electorate will consist of a more diverse racial makeup.
Iowa and New Hampshire are racially homogenous —
with entrance and exit polls showing that over 90 percent of the
Democratic electorates in each state were white. In Nevada, the 2008
entrance poll data shows that 15 percent of Democratic caucus goers were
Hispanic and another 15 percent were black. In South Carolina, 55
percent of Democratic primary voters were black, according to NBC News
exit polls.
Our tracking poll has shown that nationally,
white Democratic voters are divided over their choice in candidate, with
44 percent currently supporting Clinton and 47 percent supporting
Sanders. Among non-white voters, however, the former Secretary of State
has had stronger support than the senator from Vermont.
Both Clinton and Sanders have been campaigning hard for the
attention of non-white voters in South Carolina and Nevada. Each
candidate has picked up notable endorsements in the past week. Last
Tuesday, the PAC for the Congressional Black Caucus held an event to
announce its endorsement of Clinton.
Sanders secured endorsements from Harry
Belafonte, the notable civil rights activist and performer, as well as
Erica Garner — the daughter of Eric Garner, the Staten Island man who
died after police put him in a chokehold in 2014.
Sanders has received widespread attention for
his solid capture of the millennial vote in Iowa and New Hampshire —
those between the age of 18 and 34. However, the most recent data from
the NBC News|SurveyMonkey tracking poll shows that Sanders' popularity
does not extend to young black voters.
This week's poll shows that black millennial
voters who are Democratic or lean Democratic support Clinton by a wide
margin, 64 percent to 25 percent, roughly mirroring older black voters'
support for her (73 percent to 16 percent among those over 35).
The ability of Sanders to capture the minority
vote will be key for his campaign moving forward. As the contests in
Nevada and South Carolina quickly draw closer, the millennial vote could
play a key role in deciding who will win delegates in each of these
states.
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