Ahead of the Wisconsin primary, Donald Trump remains the GOP front-runner, but his support among Republican and Republican-leaners nationally has dropped 3 points to 45 percent, down from 48 percent last week.
Ted Cruz is behind Trump with 28 percent support, and John Kasich has 18 percent support, according to the NBC News|SurveyMonkey Weekly Election Tracking poll conducted online from March 28 to April 3 of 14,071 adults aged 18 and over including 12,116 registered voters.
While Trump is still far ahead of the other candidates, this week’s 17-point margin is the smallest between Trump and Cruz since mid-February.
For Trump, it was a contentious news week. His campaign manager, Corey Lewandowski, was charged with assaulting a reporter. Trump also told MSNBC’s Chris Matthews that if abortions were illegal, women who have them should face “some form of punishment.” His campaign later released a statement walking back the remark. Even during a controversial week, Trump’s national numbers only dipped slightly from last week. Perhaps surprisingly, his support among women barely dropped from last week. Forty-two percent of women support Trump this week, compared to 45 percent last week. We’ll be watching whether Trump’s numbers continue to slip this week.
While Trump’s national numbers remain strong, results from our poll suggest he may not get the support from a key demographic group in Wisconsin. In the weeks leading up to the Republican primary, conservative activists across Wisconsin have been advocating against Trump. In 2008, 27 percent of Wisconsin Republican primary voters identified as very conservative. In 2012, that number grew to 32 percent. Very conservative Republican voters are likely to be influential in Tuesday’s primary contest. Cruz continues to outperform Trump among registered voters who identify as very conservative in our tracking poll. Forty-five percent of that group support Cruz compared to 41 percent who support Trump.









