Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump have both sprinted out to commanding leads in their home state of New York with just over two weeks remaining before polls open there.

A new Quinnipac University poll finds the former First Lady and New York Senator leading Democratic challenger Bernie Sanders 54 percent to 42 percent.

Trump, meanwhile, is leading Texas Sen. Ted Cruz 56 percent to 20 percent, with Ohio Gov. John Kasich lagging even further behind at just 19 percent.

Researchers also found that the Empire State solidly remains blue, with both Clinton and Sanders easily dispatching of Trump in any general election match-up by an average of 22 points.

Clinton, Sanders Both top Trump in General Election Match-up

Pollsters found Clinton leads Trump 53 percent to 33 percent and Sanders has a 56 percent to 32 percent advantage. In addition, Clinton also tops Cruz (53 percent to 32 percent) and Kasich (46 percent to 41 percent), while Sanders blasts Cruz (56 percent to 28 percent) and holds off Kasich (57 percent to 37 percent).

It's been a contentious last few weeks for Trump, who polls also show appears to be on a downward swing with general election voters in terms of popularity.

A collection of recent surveys culled together by Real Clear Politics find Trump suffers from a 63 percent unfavorable image among all general election voters and trials Clinton in at least six national polls taken over the last several weeks.

Latinos Have Unfavorable Opinion of Trump

When it comes to Latinos, the man who launched his campaign by vowing to deport as many as 11 million immigrants and erect a massive wall along the Mexican border favorability ratings are particularly in the basement.

A recent Washington Post/Univision poll found that more than 80 percent of Hispanics have an unfavorable view of Trump, by far the worse rating among the field of remaining GOP candidates. The poll also found Trump would lose the Latino vote to Clinton by a better than 4-1 margin, at 73 percent to16 percent.