New York’s Hispanic voters may have a secret soft spot for Donald Trump.

A new poll pegs support for Trump at 40 percent among Latino registered voters in the Empire State.

The results would be a major break from recent electoral history. Barack Obama took 89 percent of that demographic in his 2012 victory.

And, in a sign of continued electoral turmoil, 20 percent of registered Democrats plan to vote for Trump — while 21 percent of registered Republicans say they will go for Hillary Clinton.

Obama held on to 95 percent of New York’s Democrats in the last election.

“This definitely is one of the stranger election cycles in memory,” said Staten Island City Council member Joe Borelli, a Trump supporter. “But I think this does dispel some rumors about Trump’s numbers in certain communities.”

The survey found Clinton leading her GOP rival in New York by 14 percentage points, with minor-party candidates included.

But the former senator failed to gain a majority in her home state, pulling 48 percent of the vote overall, with Trump at 34 percent, Libertarian Gary Johnson at 6 percent, and the Green Party’s Jill Stein at 4 percent.

The Gravis Marketing poll for Breitbart News surveyed 1,717 New Yorkers from Aug. 4-8.

The Trump campaign launched a new offensive Saturday with a lengthy press release — and a list of dozens of recent news headlines — decrying Clinton’s “corruption, pay-to-play and flip-flops.”

Trump attended a Saturday fund-raiser in East Hampton hosted by Jets owner Woody Johnson, then headlined an evening rally in Fairfield County, Conn.