Asked if they thought each candidate was honest, more respondents described Trump that way (32 percent) than Clinton (28 percent). But more respondents agreed Clinton was more empathetic (42-27), better able to handle a national crisis (48-31) and more qualified to be president (56-30) than Trump.

Clinton was viewed unfavorably by 58 percent of registered voters, while Trump was viewed unfavorably by 64 percent. Among Republicans, Trump was viewed unfavorably by 35 percent, which Franklin described as “historically bad.”

Also, 55 percent said they would be very uncomfortable with Trump as president, compared with only 42 percent who said the same about Clinton.

The poll was the first presidential poll in Wisconsin since Trump and Clinton became their party’s presumptive nominees.

The last Marquette poll in late March found Clinton leading Trump by more than 10 percentage points among registered voters. That was consistent with other national polls in Wisconsin that have been taken since then, the last of which was released a month ago.

The Marquette poll was conducted June 9-12. It involved 800 registered voters with a margin of error of +/-4.4 percentage points. The likely voter sample was 666 respondents with a margin of error of +/-4.9 percentage points.The majority of responses came in before Sunday’s terrorist attack at an Orlando gay club that left 50 dead, including the killer, and 53 wounded. Franklin said an analysis of the results that came in Sunday did not show a statistically significant difference from earlier results.

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