SANTA CLARA, Calif. – Hillary Clinton is no Barack Obama.

Support for the former Secretary of State among college students has plunged in the last two months, according to a new poll conducted by the textbook company Chegg.

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According to the company, Hillary had the support of 40 percent of college students in June. That’s now fallen to 18 percent.

Conversely, chief rival Sen. Bernie Sanders was supported by 26 percent of college students in June, according to the poll. That support has now surged to 59 percent of college students.

Interestingly, the company also polled Vice President Joe Biden’s name in June, finding 13 percent of students supported him. That increased only one percentage point in September, to 14 percent.

As Chegg points out, “she’s in statistical dead heat with someone who isn’t even running (yet).”

Meanwhile, on the Republican side, Ben Carson has now overtaken Donald Trump, winning the support of 16 percent of college students.

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In June, Carson and Trump were both polling at 8 percent. To date, Trump peaked at 17 percent in August and has now fallen to 11 percent in September, tying Sen. Rand Paul for third. In the Chegg poll, Jeb Bush is in second with 14 percent of college students.

The aura of inevitability has also fallen significantly for Clinton. In June, 55 percent of college students believed Hillary was “most likely” to be the next president. Today, while still leading in that category, only 35 percent of students still believe it.

Sanders is in second with 22 percent and Trump is in third with 16 percent.