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Frontrunners Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton have won the presidential primary in New York.
Donald Trump secured 60 per cent of the vote, easily eclipsing rivals Senator Ted Cruz and Governor John Kasich.
Former secretary of state, Hillary Clinton, scored an equally emphatic 58 per cent to 42 per cent win over Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.
Mrs Clinton thanked New Yorkers 'for having her back.'
"Today once again you have proved there is no place like home,' she told supporters in her victory speech.
'You know in this campaign we have won in every region of the country, from the north, to the south, to the east to the west, but this one is personal.'
Mr Trump was forecast to have won the primary within minutes after poll closed, indicating the billionaire businessman easily beat his two rivals, Senator Ted Cruz and Governor John Kasich.
The Republican frontrunner told his supporters he had the momentum going into July's Republican convention in Cleveland.
'We don't have much of a race anymore based on what I am seeing on television,' Mr Trump said during his victory speech.
'Senator Cruz is just about mathematically eliminated and we have won another state.'
Should Mr Trump secure over 50 per cent of the vote, he will pick up the majority of delegates and keep in the race to secure the 1,237 needed to wrap up the Republican nomination.
Early exit polls also indicate Hillary Clinton s secured a narrow victory over rival Bernie Sanders.
There are 95 delegates available for the Republican candidates, while there are 291 Democratic delegates at stake.
The win came at a critical time for Hillary Clinton, who had lost seven of the eight states to her Democratic rival, Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders.
However polls leading up to the primary indicated she held a 12 point advantage, while exit results indicate that her lead has shrunk to four points.
The former secretary of state still leads the Senator Sanders by over 244 delegates.
If she manages to continue her momentum and other delegate rich states such as Maryland and Pennsylvania, it will become mathematically impossible for Senator Sanders to reach the 2,383 delegates needed to become the party's nominee.
Voting irregularities have cast a pall over Tuesday's primary, with official confirmation that more than 125,000 people are missing from New York City voter rolls and reports of other irregularities.
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