Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton speaks at an International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers training center, Tuesday, May 24, in Commerce, Calif. | AP Photo National poll: Clinton lead narrows in 4-way race

Amid a campaign shakeup and swirling controversy at Trump Tower, Hillary Clinton holds a five point lead over Donald Trump in a new poll released Tuesday.

Clinton tops Trump 47 percent to 42 percent among responding registered voters to the latest CNN/ORC poll, conducted before the resignation of Trump’s campaign manager Corey Lewandowski on Monday. Her lead over Trump narrows to 4 percentage points, 42-38, in a four-way race that includes Libertarian Gary Johnson (9 percent) and Green Party candidate Jill Stein (7 percent).


Only 22 percent of registered voters polled said they had yet to make a decision to support one of the major-party candidates for president. Of that group, more than a third chose either Johnson or Stein when asked who they would vote for in a four-way race.

The former secretary of state’s charge that the real estate mogul is “temperamentally unfit” for the White House, aided by Trump’s own bluster, also appears to be sticking with voters: 56 percent of those polled said Clinton has a better temperament for the presidency, while just 32 percent picked Trump.

The presumptive Republican nominee does lead Clinton by eight points, 45 percent to 37 percent, on the question of who is more honest and trustworthy. Seventeen percent of those polled said neither candidate fit that description. Both are viewed unfavorably by nearly six-in-10 respondents.

The CNN/ORC poll was in the field from June 16-19, reaching 1,001 adults and 891 registered voters via telephone. The results for registered voters have a margin of error of plus-or-minus 3.5 points.