Businessman Donald Trump still has a solid lead in the latest poll and is the odds on favorite to be the winner on Tuesday.

Advertisement Final WMUR Republican poll: Trump still up big over Rubio, Cruz Nearly two-thirds of likely GOP voters believe Trump will win primary Share Shares Copy Link Copy

In the final WMUR-CNN poll before the first-in-the-nation presidential primary, there continues to be little change on the Republican side. Businessman Donald Trump still has a solid lead and is the odds on favorite to be the winner on Tuesday.Click to watch News 9's coverage.The New Hampshire Primary Poll, conducted by the University of New Hampshire Survey Center from Feb. 4-8, shows Trump with the support of 31 percent, U.S. Sen. Marco Rubio of Florida at 17 percent and U.S. Sen. Ted Cruz of Texas at 14 percent.Among the three candidates vying to be the “top governor” on primary day, Ohio Gov. John Kasich is backed by 10 percent of those polled, with former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush at 7 percent, and New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie at 4 percent.Meanwhile, former business executive Carly Fiorina is slightly ahead of Christie, with the support of 5 percent. Retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson trails at 3 percent, with 1 percent backing “someone else” and 7 percent unable to say who they would support of the election were held today.The poll sample included 362 Granite Staters who said they plan to vote in the Republican primary. The poll has a margin of error of plus or minus 5.2 percentage points.View the poll results here.Trump continues to be the candidate who, by far, most voters believe will win the New Hampshire primary. He was named as the likely winner by 64 percent of those polled, while 13 percent said they did not know, 11 percent named Cruz and 8 percent named Rubio.The poll indicates that in typical New Hampshire fashion, many likely voters are undecided even at this late point in the campaign. Only 46 percent of likely Republican voters have definitely decided who they will vote for, while 24 percent are leaning toward a candidate and 31 percent are still trying to decide.UNH polling director Andrew Smith said that in the so-called “horse race” question, likely voters are asked who they would support if the election were today. The percentages for the candidates include those who are leaning toward supporting each candidate, even though they may not have made a final, definite decision on who they will vote for on Tuesday.As a result, 31 percent of Republican primary voters have not made a final decision about who they will support on primary day, while 7 percent of Republican voters could not say who they would vote for if the election were held today.The poll also showed that independent voters are split on which ballot they will take on primary day, with 46 percent saying they will vote Republican and 47 percent saying they will vote Democratic.Trump, while continuing to lead, continues to be the candidate most likely of those polled said they would not vote for under any circumstances, named by 32 percent. Cruz and Bush were each named by 13 percent.