Hillary Clinton leads Donald Trump by 7 points in Wisconsin, according to a new Marquette Law School poll.
The survey finds Clinton with 42 percent support among registered voters and Trump with 35 percent.
{mosads}In March, the same poll showed Clinton with a 10-point lead over Trump, 47 to 37 percent.
In the June poll, Clinton had a slightly larger lead over the presumptive GOP nominee among those likely to hit the polls. Clinton garners 46 percent support among likely voters, while Trump takes 37 percent. Another 13 percent of likely voters say they don’t plan to support either candidate.
Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders has a larger lead over Trump in a matchup, 56 to 31 percent among registered voters.
Among Sanders supporters, 67 percent say they will vote for Clinton, 4 percent say they will vote for Trump, 24 percent say they will not vote for either candidate and 5 percent are undecided.
The survey also finds that among Republicans and GOP-leaners, 18 percent say they don’t plan to vote for Trump or Clinton and 5 percent say they are undecided. Among Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters, 13 percent say they won’t vote for either candidate and 4 percent say they are undecided.
Both party’s presumptive nominees are viewed negatively by a majority of voters in Wisconsin.
Among registered voters, 64 percent have an unfavorable view of Trump and only 26 percent have a favorable view of the candidate. For Clinton, 58 percent have an unfavorable view of her and 37 percent have a favorable view.
The survey was conducted from June 9-12 among 800 registered voters, with 666 voters saying they are certain to vote in the November election. The margin of error is 4.4 points for the full sample and 4.9 points for the sample of likely voters.