Despite trailing other Democrats in Iowa ahead of the state’s early presidential caucuses, Elizabeth Warren is among a handful of 2020 White House challengers who is seen as having a chance of defeating President Donald Trump in a hypothetical matchup, a new poll suggests.

An Emerson College Polling survey released Monday found that while the Massachusetts senator lags behind former Vice President Joe Biden, U.S. Sen. Bernie Sanders, Mayor Pete Buttigieg and U.S. Sen. Kamala Harris in Iowa, Hawkeye State voters appear more confident in her general election chances.

Just 9 percent of likely Iowa Democratic Caucus voters said they’d back Warren, compared to a quarter who respectively said they’d support Biden and Sanders. Buttigieg, meanwhile, trailed with 11 percent of the likely caucus vote, followed by Harris with 10 percent, according to survey results.

When asked about possible general election matchups, however, Iowa voters put Warren behind just Biden and Sanders as the best Democrat to take on Trump in November 2020.

Forty-nine percent of respondents said they believed Warren would defeat the incumbent Republican in such a hypothetical matchup, compared to 51 percent who gave Trump the edge.

Iowa voters, meanwhile, said they believed Biden would best Trump in a general election fight by a 53 to 47 percent margin, and Sanders would win over the GOP leader by a 51 to 49 percent margin.

Despite being essentially tied with Warren and other Democratic challengers in possible general election matchups, Trump continues to hold a solid lead among likely Iowa Republican Caucus-goers, with 90 percent saying they would back him over former Massachusetts Gov. Bill Weld, the poll found.

Weld, the Libertarian Party’s 2016 vice presidential candidate, launched a committee in February to look at a possible 2020 White House run and Republican primary challenge against Trump.

The poll surveyed more than 700 voters, including 249 Democrats, from March 21 to 24. It has a margin of error of plus or minus 3.6 percentage points for all voters and plus of minus 6.2 percent for Democratic Caucus results.