It’s looking like another Granite State escape for the Clintons.

This one took magical coins in Iowa, a stacked debate and a socialist opponent, but Hillary Clinton, just like eight years ago and her husband Bill 24 years ago, is about to leave New Hampshire with her White House hopes intact.

The former secretary of state is closing fast on Vermont U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders — from a 20-point deficit to just seven in a week. The latest Franklin Pierce University/Boston Herald poll has Sanders at 51 percent to her at 44 percent, compared to his 57 percent to her 37 percent last week. And there’s a possibility she could even overtake him — essentially lights out for his insurgent campaign in just two tries.

Sanders still holds the edge. The poll shows only 17 percent of Democratic primary voters could change their minds. But a narrow win would allow Clinton to claim yet another amazing comeback and move on, with most of the media buying it.

New Hampshire voters are notorious for giving front-runners a scare, and this one is holding true to form on the Democratic side. They know full well how much their votes mean and aren’t afraid to use their voices strategically.

Clinton, after coasting for months and avoiding real voters, fell behind Sanders in the polls and it looked over in the Granite State. Some advisers wanted her to pull out.

It’s never over for the Clintons. A shaky Iowa win, aided by the Democrats’ laughable “vote” counting and Hillary’s unbelievable luck on coin flips, propelled her to New Hampshire with some momentum.

The national party had suddenly agreed to another debate, knowing Clinton had nothing to lose. A few artfully planted stories about Sanders falsely claiming endorsements, a minor transgression at best, set the stage and the Vermont senator walked into the trap. Clinton played the victim of a “smear” and Sanders looked defensive and loud.

Now Bill, whose eight-point loss to former Massachusetts U.S. Sen. Paul Tsongas in 1992 was called a “comeback” because he looked dead after reports of draft dodging and philandering, is back to remind Democrats of the Clinton attachment to New Hampshire, especially Hillary’s 2008 stunner over Barack Obama.

The new Franklin Pierce University/Boston Herald poll shows good signs for the former first lady. She’s beating Sanders among registered Democrats, while Sanders crushes her among independents, who could decide to flock to the GOP ballot to vote for or against Trump.

Clinton’s favorable rating in New Hampshire has increased to 75 percent since Iowa, and she’s also regained some of her aura of inevitability, with 61 percent now saying she’ll be the nominee while just 27 percent pick Sanders — an increase for her and a drop for him.

Clinton also is beating Sanders now among voters who aren’t eligible for AARP membership — the 35-49 demographic, according to the poll. Sanders must rely on a big turnout from young voters, a risky strategy especially if a snowstorm keeps students in their dorms.

An actual Clinton win would be a real comeback and Sanders deserves to fade quickly. And once again New Hampshire’s delegation will get front-row seats at a Clinton coronation convention.