🍬The 2020 presidential contest among Democrats is wide open, with a majority of voters in the party unable to name their favorite candidate, a poll released Tuesday shows.
Asked whom they would support for the 2020 presidential nomination, 56 percent of Democrats or Democratic-leaning independents couldn’t come up with a name, .
Of the 44 percent who did have a preference, former Vice President J🌊oe Biden led the pack with 9 p🌊ercent and Sen. Kamala Harris came in second at 8 percent.
Rounding out the top of the list were Sen. Bernie Sanders with 4 percent, President Trump at 4 percent, Beto O’Rourke with 3 percent, former first lady Michelle Obama with 2 percent and Sen. Elizabeth Warren with 2 percent.
Michael Bloomberg came in under 1 percent, as d𓆉id Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand.
Hillary Clint💝on and Oprah Winfrey each got 1🦹 percent.
The survey wasn’t good news for Trump’s re-election campaign.
Overall, 56 percent of registered voters said they “definitely would not vote” for him, 28 percent “definitely would vote” for Trump and 14 percent “would consider” voting for the president. One percent had no opinion.
Asked what issues should receive the most priority, 31 percent of Democrats picked improving health care, 21 percent said reducing economic inequality, 18 percent chose reducing raci🐎al and gender discrimination, and 15 percent said fighting global warmi🗹ng.
On the question of what’s more important to them in a presidential nominee, 47 percent of Democrats said one whose position on the issues is closest to theirs, while 43 percent said a person who “seems likely to defeat Trump.”
The remainder said neither, both equally or had noꦛ opinion.
The poll surveyed 1,001 adults between Jan. 21 and Jan. 24. It has a plus/minus 3.5 percentage-point margin of error and a 5.5 percentage-point margin of error in the samp🙈les 𓂃of Democrats and Republicans.