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NY Times: Polling in New York’s 12th District Points to a Competitive Race

By Caroline Soler | Original Article

Micah Lasher and Alex Bores have consistently led in recent polls as Jack Schlossberg’s support has dipped.

With Representative Jerry Nadler retiring after representing New York’s 12th Congressional District for more than three decades, a crowded Democratic primary will decide his successor. Based on recent polling, the leading candidates are two state assemblymen, Micah Lasher and Alex Bores, and Jack Schlossberg, the grandson of John F. Kennedy.

Ten polls have been released publicly in this race — a fairly high number for a House primary — but only one, an Emerson College poll commissioned by PIX 11 and Nexstar from mid-May, was fielded independently. The rest were paid for by campaigns or outside groups aligned with specific candidates, who may release results selectively.

Recent New York 12th District Democratic Primary Polls

See all polls ›

poll from

Emerson College 

Sponsor:
Nexstar, PIX 11

conducted May 16 to 17

May 16-17

425 likely voters

Lasher +1

22%Lasher

20%Bores

11%Schlossberg

+5 more candidates

poll from

Tavern Research

Democratic sponsor:
Jobs and Democracy PAC

conducted May 11 to 15

May 11-15

879 likely voters

Bores +3

20%Bores

17%Schlossberg

16%Lasher

+6 more candidates

poll from

GQR

Democratic sponsor:
George T. Conway

conducted May 12 to 14

May 12-14

500 likely voters

Bores +3

26%Bores

23%Lasher

17%Conway

14%Schlossberg

poll from

Hart Research Associates

Democratic sponsor:
Alex Bores

conducted May 6 to 9

May 6-9

400 likely voters

Bores +1

21%Bores

20%Lasher

17%Schlossberg

+2 more candidates

poll from

Honan Strategy Group

Sponsor:
Grand Penn Community Alliance

conducted April 16 to 22

April 16-22

300 likely voters

Lasher +8

28%Lasher

20%Schlossberg

19%Bores

9%Conway

Polls from “select pollsters” meet certain criteria for reliability and are shown with a diamond.

Polls collected by The New York Times

Mr. Schlossberg led in four of the six surveys conducted between January and April, including a pair of Schoen Cooperman Research polls commissioned by a PAC opposing Mr. Bores, as well as internal polls from the Bores and George Conway campaigns. But his early advantage appears to have rested almost entirely on name recognition. As his opponents ramped up their campaigns, his support in the polls fell quickly — he has placed third in three of the four polls conducted since the start of May.

In Mr. Conway’s internal polls, Mr. Bores and Mr. Lasher, who is Mr. Nadler’s chosen successor, each gained more than ten percentage points between the campaign’s early March and mid-May polls, whereas Mr. Schlossberg lost nine.

The four most recent polls, all fielded in May, point to a competitive two-way race between Mr. Bores and Mr. Lasher, with no survey showing the pair separated by more than five points.

One of the most consistent findings in the polls is that a large share of voters are still making up their minds: In three of the four most recent polls, more than a quarter of voters said they were undecided. Considering how little separation there is between the front-runners, this race will hinge on where those voters land.