New York voters would likely re-elect Gov. Andrew Cuomo and U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand to new terms this year, but voters say neither one should run for president in 2020, according to a new poll published today.

By an overwhelming margin of 63-28 percent, New Yorkers said they would not like to see Cuomo run for president, the Quinnipiac University poll found.

Even among members of his own party, Democrats opposed a Cuomo bid for president by 49-38 percent.

New York voters had almost identical feelings about a potential Gillibrand run for president in 2020, opposing the idea 58-28 percent, and 47-35 percent among Democrats.

Neither Cuomo nor Gillibrand has announced plans to make a presidential bid, but both have been positioning themselves for months to seek the Democratic nomination in 2020.

Quinnipiac University surveyed 1,038 New York voters from Friday through Monday, using live interviewers who called landlines and cell phones. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.9 percentage points.

The new poll shows Cuomo has a positive job approval rating (47-37 percent) statewide, but in Upstate New York voters disapprove of the job he has done as governor, with a negative 40-47 percent rating.

Overall, New York voters said they are "inclined to vote to re-elect" Cuomo this November by a margin of 50-40 percent.

Only 5 percent of all New York voters, including 9 percent of Republicans, could correctly name any of the Republican candidates who have announced they are running for governor, including state Sen. John DeFrancisco of the Syracuse area. DeFrancisco began a campaign for governor two weeks ago.

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