• Aside from accusing China of stealing U.S. secrets, Hillary Clinton also criticized China's South China Sea Policy.

Aside from accusing China of stealing U.S. secrets, Hillary Clinton also criticized China's South China Sea Policy. (Photo : Reuters)

Hillary Clinton will win rousingly if the United States presidential election were held today, a new report said. The former secretary of state will romp her way to the White House and not a single opponent - Democrat or Republican - is capable of stopping her.

Six out of 10 Americans will vote for Bill Clinton's wife and give her the return ticket to the same building that President Bill Clinton had occupied from 1992 to 2000. In the latest poll conducted by CNN this March, Clinton emerged as the runaway winner beating frontrunners from her own party and the GOP.

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CNN said that around 1000 voting-age Americans have participated during the telephone survey.

The former senator will not give current U.S. Vice President Joe Biden a fighting chance as the latter is behind her by 50 points. Even the popular Sen. Elizabeth Warren from Massachusetts is destined to lose. Pitted against Clinton's 62 percent, Warren can only muster 15 percent of support.

The same narrative plays out as the CNN poll matched Clinton against leading Republican candidates. Jeb Bush, gearing up for a third Bush presidency, has attracted 40 percent but fell short of Clinton's 55 percent.

In another showdown, rising conservative star Rand Paul scooped up 43 percent, which is the highest that any Republican had managed to get in the poll. Clinton, however, essentially erected a wall in the face of the young politician with her 54 percent of likely electoral support.

Not one of the contenders breached the 10-point barrier that Clinton enjoys. The network noted too that the survey was administered in the wake of the recent email controversy. Clinton received flak for her decision to use a personal not an official email when she headed the State Department during the first administration of President Barack Obama.

The controversy not negatively impacting on Clinton's chances of becoming president was unsurprising at all, The Huffington Post said in a report. Citing its own poll, the news site added that the issue was mostly brushed aside by respondents - Democrats and independents alike.

The sentiment that Hillary Clinton gunning for the White House and the email questions are rolled into one big political bump is but confined to the Republican crowd.