According to an informal polling of students at Latter-day Saint-owned Institution Brigham Young University, students are "Feeling the Bern."

An internal email from campus officials invited all students to take an online poll conducted by "The Daily Universe," a campus newsletter. 735 students took the poll, all are self-identified as BYU students. Of the 735 students polled, a full 30 percent said if the election was held today, they would vote for the Democratic Socialist from Vermont. Marco Rubio, the Republican Senator from Florida came in second with 10 percent less. This poll was conducted from Februrary 8th through the 15th, and has a margin of error of 4 percent.

This is keeping with other polls that also show Bernie Sanders beating all Republican candidates currently running, which means that the only way to keep the White House in November with the Democrats would be if Bernie Sanders can win the nomination.

The poll results were:

Bernie Sanders: 29.8%

Marco Rubio: 20.27%

Ben Carson: 10.2%

Ted Cruz: 9.12%

Hillary Clinton: 7.21%

Undecided: 7.21%

Donald Trump: 3.67%

John Kasich: 3.67%

Jeb Bush: 2.31%

Other: 2.31%

Not Voting: 1.5%

Carly Fiorina: 1.36%

Chris Christie: 0.95%

Gary Johnson: 0.27%

Jill Stein: 0.14%

The interesting thing is that the next Democrat on the list doesn't come in 3rd or 4th, but 5th. This can only mean that the issue of electability and whether Bernie Sanders is electable has to be ruled out.

It's obvious with the latest polling from multiple sources that he can in fact win in hypothetical matchups. It's still early in the race and anything can and probably will happen, but the numbers are showing that choosing "electability" as a basis for your vote is going to be much harder going forward since what many believe is wrong about who is the most electable.

What about the female students?

You might think that female students would side with one of the female candidates, but the results were pretty close to the same as for the rest of the student body. Sanders still leads -- in fact, with a larger lead among women (29.43% to 19.62% for Rubio).

Male students also had similar leanings and had Bernie Sanders at 30.16% and Rubio at 20.92% while Clinton was at 7.9% and 6.52% respectively for the female and male demographics.