Polls show that Americans think Donald Trump has the best leadership skills out of the 2016 candidates, according to the real estate mogul himself.

On CNN’s State of the Union Nov. 8, host Jake Tapper asked Trump why voters should pick him to be their president.

"I’m the one who’s going to make this country great again," Trump responded, adding, "When you do polls, and in fact when CNN does polls, you look at my numbers on leadership, it’s two and three and four times higher than anybody else."

With other candidates nipping at Trump’s heels in the polls -- notably retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson -- we wondered if it’s accurate that Trump is so far ahead on the question of which candidate would be the strongest leader.

We went through all of the national Republican primary polls collected by Real Clear Politics, from May through November (about 50 polls). We found only a handful that surveyed people about candidates’ leadership qualities, and just one that asked respondents to compare candidates in terms of leadership.

As far as polling goes, that’s a fairly small sample. But Trump does have a point. Here’s what we found:

Washington Post/ABC poll, conducted Oct. 15-18

This poll asked Republican-leaning respondents who among six candidates is the strongest leader. Nearly half of respondents -- 47 percent -- selected Trump.

Twelve percent said former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush, followed by Florida Sen. Marco Rubio (11 percent), Carson (9 percent), Texas Sen. Ted Cruz (8 percent), and former Hewlett-Packard CEO Carly Fiorina (6 percent).

This poll comes the closest to matching Trump’s talking point: Nearly four times as many respondents said Trump is the strongest leader compared to Bush, the candidate with the next-highest results. However, this is the only poll we could find that asks people to choose the best leader among several candidates.

Trump led the Washington Post/ABC poll overall with 32 percent support; Carson was second with 21 percent.

Quinnipiac University poll, released Nov. 1

This poll asked, "Would you say that (candidate) has strong leadership qualities or not?" When presented this question about Trump, 60 percent of respondents answered "yes" -- the highest percentage of yes answers.

Former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie followed, each receiving 56 percent. Rubio and Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., each received 48 percent. Carson got 47, and Cruz got the lowest with 45 percent.

CBS News poll, released Oct. 11

CBS asked Republican voters about various qualities held by the three outsider candidates: Trump, Carson and Fiorina. Among respondents, 84 percent said Trump has strong qualities of leadership. Carson followed, at 72 percent, and 60 percent said Fiorina has strong leadership qualities.

Quinnipiac poll, released Sept. 24

Like the other Quinnipiac poll, this one asked, "Would you say that (candidate) has strong leadership qualities or not?" When presented this question about Trump, 58 percent of respondents answered "yes" -- the highest percentage of yes answers.

Clinton followed, receiving 55 percent. Next was Vice President Joe Biden (54 percent), Bush (52 percent), Fiorina (52 percent), Carson (48 percent), and Sanders (45 percent).

(Quinnipiac has released a few other polls that ask this question over the past few months, with similar results.)

What about that CNN poll

Trump specifically mentioned a CNN poll, but searching through Real Clear Politics’ collection and on the CNN website, we couldn’t find one that asked about leadership qualities. We also reached out to Trump’s campaign but didn’t hear back.

Our ruling

Trump said that in polls about 2016 candidate leadership skills, he comes out "two and three and four times higher than anybody else."

Only a few polls so far have asked about candidates’ leadership qualities, but Trump has a point that he usually comes out on top. One poll in particular supported Trump’s claim: Compared to the candidate with the next-highest results, about four times as many people said Trump had the best leadership skills among a group of candidates.

But that was just one poll. Most polls have asked respondents to say whether each individual candidate has strong leadership qualities -- not comparing the candidates against each other. In these polls, Trump beats out his opponents by a handful of percentage points, not two, three or four times higher.

We rate Trump’s claim Half True.