Washington (CNN) -- New Hampshire remains Clinton country.
Sixty-two percent of Democratic primary voters in New Hampshire say that if the primary were held today, Hillary Clinton, the prohibitive favorite for the Democrats' 2016 presidential nomination, would be their top choice, according to a Bloomberg Politics/Saint Anselm College poll released Monday.
The number is a whopping 49 percentage points higher than second-place finisher Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts. Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont finishes in third with 6% and Vice President Joe Biden finishes in fourth with 5%.
Although Clinton has not declared her second run at the presidency, the former secretary of state has admitted she is considering a run and many close aides see a campaign as all-but-certain at this point.
New Hampshire has always been welcome ground for the Clinton family. Bill Clinton's surprising second place finish in the 1992 primary provided his campaign with a symbolic victory and re-energized the Arkansas governor as 'The Comeback Kid.' Likewise, in 2008, after finishing a disappointing third in the Iowa caucuses, Hillary Clinton used her New Hampshire primary win to right her campaign.
Despite her huge lead, even Clinton's most ardent New Hampshire supporters have cautioned her to not take the Granite State as already in the bag.
'Inevitability is not a message, it is not something you can run on. And in New Hampshire, we have a long history of (frontrunner) train wrecks,' Terry Shumaker, the 2008 co-chair of Hillary Clinton's New Hampshire campaign, said last week during a meeting of pro-Clinton Democrats.
Shumaker, a longtime Clinton supporter who was with Bill Clinton when he filed his presidential bid papers in 1991, added: 'As I caution all presidential candidates in New Hampshire, taking New Hampshire for granted is very dangerous. Last time I believe Hillary Clinton had an almost 30-point lead in the polls in our state in the summer and that lead melted like an ice sculpture on the mall in Washington in July.'
Monday's poll, however, is not all good news for Clinton.
In a 2016 general election matchup between Clinton and Mitt Romney, the failed 2012 Republican nominee, Clinton's one point lead is within the polls margin of error. When matched up against Jeb Bush, the former Republican governor, or Rand Paul, the senator from Kentucky, Clinton enjoyed a 8 and 7 point lead, respectively.
Entities 0 Name: New Hampshire Count: 9 1 Name: Clinton Count: 9 2 Name: Hillary Clinton Count: 4 3 Name: Bill Clinton Count: 2 4 Name: Washington Count: 2 5 Name: Sen. Bernie Sanders Count: 1 6 Name: Arkansas Count: 1 7 Name: Terry Shumaker Count: 1 8 Name: Iowa Count: 1 9 Name: Joe Biden Count: 1 10 Name: Sen. Elizabeth Warren Count: 1 11 Name: Shumaker Count: 1 12 Name: Massachusetts Count: 1 13 Name: Republican Count: 1 14 Name: Bloomberg Politics\/Saint Anselm College Count: 1 15 Name: Vermont Count: 1 16 Name: Jeb Bush Count: 1 17 Name: Granite State Count: 1 18 Name: Kentucky Count: 1 19 Name: Democratic Count: 1 20 Name: Mitt Romney Count: 1 21 Name: Paul Count: 1 Related 0 Url: http://ift.tt/1xi3hrT Title: For Democrats, Hillary Clinton just has to say 'Go.' For voters, she'll have to say much more. Description: It was all Hillary Clinton, all day, Friday in New York, a day that helped crystallize how much already has been done for the prospective presidential candidate by others and, more importantly, what she has yet to do for herself.