The University of New Hampshire conducted a survey of 621 New Hampshire adults between Apr 7 and Apr 17, 2016. Respondents were contacted by either Cellphone or Landline and instructed by a live operator. The results of this poll were released on Apr 21, 2016.
The poll was sponsored by WMUR TV (ABC: New Hampshire).
Results were provided for each of the 2 publicly acknowledged questions along with the order in which they were presented.
Question 2 | PreferenceView Matchup
If the 2016 presidential election was being held today and the candidates were Donald Trump, the Republican, and Hillary Clinton, the Democrat, would you vote for Donald Trump… Hillary Clinton… some other candidate …. or would you skip this election? ROTATE CANDIDATES
| Clinton (D) | Trump (R) | Other | Don't Know | Total |
---|
All | 50% | 31% | 15% | 4% | 533 Likely |
Female | 57% | 23% | 17% | 3% | 52.35% 279 |
Male | 42% | 40% | 13% | 4% | 47.65% 254 |
Democrat | 81% | 3% | 14% | 2% | 30.96% 165 |
Independent | 48% | 29% | 18% | 5% | 44.47% 237 |
Republican | 11% | 73% | 14% | 3% | 23.45% 125 |
This question was presented to 533 likely voters from New Hampshire who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 4.2%.
The question wording was provided by the University of New Hampshire and WMUR TV (ABC: New Hampshire).
Question 3 | PreferenceView Matchup
If the 2016 presidential election was being held today and the candidates were Donald Trump, the Republican, and Bernie Sanders, the Democrat, would you vote for Donald Trump… Bernie Sanders… some other candidate …. or would you skip this election? ROTATE CANDIDATES
| Sanders (D) | Trump (R) | Other | Don't Know | Total |
---|
All | 58% | 31% | 8% | 2% | 533 Likely |
Female | 66% | 24% | 8% | 2% | 52.16% 278 |
Male | 50% | 38% | 9% | 3% | 48.59% 259 |
Democrat | 93% | 2% | 6% | 0% | 30.96% 165 |
Independent | 59% | 29% | 13% | 3% | 45.59% 243 |
Republican | 11% | 72% | 8% | 4% | 23.26% 124 |
This question was presented to 533 likely voters from New Hampshire who were contacted in some undisclosed fashion. The margin of sampling error is ± 4.2%.
The question wording was provided by the University of New Hampshire and WMUR TV (ABC: New Hampshire).