FiveThirtyEight
Clare Malone

It’s honestly a bit hard for me to tell, since I’d imagine it’s been a mixed emotional bag for the undecided New York Democrat watching tonight: Sanders faltered a bit again on the details of his plan to break up the banks, hit Clinton well on her refusal to release her Wall Street speeches, but then looked a bit cowed when gun control came up — his stance is far from the liberal norm. That said, he got in some good punches on Clinton when her support of the crime bill came up; he’s looking to woo black voters, and the crime bill adversely affected that community. What I will say is that he’s been more agitated this debate, but I’m not sure to what end.
Micah Cohen

Clare, Sanders is down by about 15 percentage points in our weighted average of New York polls — so how’s he doing tonight? Do you think he’s done anything to shrink that number? (Assuming the polls are right, of course — they could be wrong.)
Carl Bialik

New York voters approved of Gov. Cuomo’s fracking ban in polls in December 2014 and January 2015 by large margins — and national opinion since then has moved against fracking.

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