New York presidential election polls

★ Strongly Democrat ★
29
of 538 electoral votes

Which candidate is leading in New York?

Polling average based on four-way race (%)

30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Aug 11, 2016 Nov 6 Sep Oct 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton
30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Aug 11, 2016 Nov 6 Sep Oct 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton
30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Aug 11, 2016 Nov 6 Sep Oct 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton
30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Aug 11, 2016 Nov 6 Sep Oct 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton
30 35 40 45 50 55 60 Aug 11, 2016 Nov 6 Sep Oct 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton 31.7 Trump 52.7 Clinton

The chart above displays the two leading presidential candidates, Democrat Hillary Clinton and Republican Donald Trump. Two other candidates with significant support are Libertarian Gary Johnson, who is polling at 6.7 per cent, and Jill Stein of the Green Party, who is polling at 4 per cent. Read about our methodology.

Who won past presidential races in New York?

New York National
Year Margin of victory (pts) Margin of victory (pts)
2012 Obama
+28.2 Obama
+3.9
2008 Obama
+26.9 Obama
+7.3
2004 Kerry
+18.3 Bush (G.W.)
+2.5
2000 Gore
+25 Bush (G.W.)
+0.5
1996 Clinton (B.)
+28.9 Clinton (B.)
+8.5
1992 Clinton (B.)
+15.9 Clinton (B.)
+5.6
1988 Dukakis
+4.1 Bush (G.H.W.)
+7.7
1984 Reagan
+8 Reagan
+18.2
1980 Reagan
+2.7 Reagan
+9.7
1976 Carter
+4.4 Carter
+2.1
1972 Nixon
+17.3 Nixon
+23.2

Key data about New York

Economic and demographic indicators relative to the national average (%). Darker lines indicate multiple states with similar values.

Wage growth

4.7% New York -2.8%min 4.4%US 6.7%max

Unemployment rate

5% New York 2.9%min 4.9%US 6.9%max

Poverty rate

15.4% New York 8.2%min 13.5%US 22%max

College educated

33.7% New York 18.7%min 29.3%US 53.4%max

Hispanic population

18.8% New York 1.5%min 17.6%US 48%max

African-American population

17.6% New York 0.6%min 13.3%US 48.3%max

All individual polls

Date Pollster Clinton / Trump (%) Clinton TrumpSample*
Nov 3 - 4 Siena 51 / 34 51% 34%617 LV
Oct 13 - 17 Siena 54 / 30 54% 30%611 LV
Sep 21 - 23 NBC 4 NY, WSJ, Marist 52 / 31 52% 31%676 LV
Sep 11 - 15 Siena 51 / 30 51% 30%600 LV
Aug 28 - 30 Emerson 52 / 34 52% 34%800 LV
Aug 7 - 10 Siena 50 / 25 50% 25%717 RV
Aug 4 - 8 Gravis 48 / 34 48% 34%1,717 RV
Jul 13 - 17 Quinnipiac 45 / 33 45% 33%1,104 RV

* RV indicates registered voters; LV indicates likely voters

Methodology: The FT poll tracker is based on Real Clear Politics (RCP) data and checks for new polls at least once an hour as polls are added by RCP staff.

The poll tracker is based on a four-way race, which includes Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton, Republican candidate Donald Trump, Libertarian candidate Gary Johnson and Green Party candidate Jill Stein. In states where Stein is not on the ballot (Nevada, Oklahoma and South Dakota), a three-way polling average is used. In Utah, where independent candidate Evan McMullin is polling significantly, a five-way polling average is used.

The FT’s US election poll tracker switched from two-way polling averages to four-way polling averages on September 21 to better reflect the options available to voters.

A state is considered ‘solid’ if the difference in polling averages between two candidates is above 10 per cent; ‘leaning’ if it is between 10 and 5 per cent; and a ‘toss-up’ if it falls below 5 per cent.

Most states use a ‘winner-take-all’ method of electoral college vote allocation. Maine and Nebraska, however, use an alternative method called the congressional district method in which the state is divided into congressional districts and the winner of each district takes that district’s electoral vote. The winner of the statewide vote is awarded two electoral votes.

Sources: Real Clear Politics, The Green Papers, US Census Bureau, Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bureau of Economic Analysis

Produced by: Steve Bernard, Joanna S. Kao, Luke Kavanagh, Callum Locke, Claire Manibog, Caroline Nevitt, Tom Pearson, Ændrew Rininsland, and Martin Stabe.