Democratic presidential candidate Bernie Sanders is holding a lead in New Hampshire, according to a University of New Hampshire/CNN poll.

Twenty-eight percent of New Hampshire voters said they support the senator from Vermont, the poll , conducted Wednesday through Saturday, found. Following Sanders, former mayor of South Bend, Indiana, Pete Buttigieg received support from 21% of voters. Both candidates remained steady from a survey released the previous day, but the new results come after Buttigieg last week saw a spike in support in New Hampshire following his win in Iowa.

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Former Vice President Joe Biden received 12%, up slightly from 11% from the previous poll. Sen. Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts remained constant at 9%, and Sen. Amy Klobuchar gained 1 percentage point, with 6% of New Hampshire voters stating they would vote for her in the state's primary.

Rep. Tulsi Gabbard and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg lost a percentage point, bringing them to 5% and 1%, respectively.

Warren comes out on top among candidates who voters choose as their second choice, with 21% saying they would vote for her if their top choice weren't running for the nomination. Buttigieg follows with 16% and Sanders takes third place with 14% of voters saying they would vote for him if their top candidate wasn't an option.