In case that early parliamentary elections be held now, 35 percent of voters would vote for Seselj's SRS.
The Democratic Party led by the incumbent Serbian President, Bioris Tadic, is second-ranked with 26 percent of votesm, the Belgrade press reported on Friday.
The Democratic Party of Serbia, led by Prime Minister Vojislav Sseljs, would finish as the third with 13.2 percent of votes.
The Socialist Party of Serbia, whose long-standing leader used to be another war crimes indictee, the late Slobodan Milosevic, would manage to pass the election threshold with 5.8 percent.
On the other hand, the G17 party of Miroljub Labus and the Serb Renewal Party led by Serbia-Montenegro's Foreign Minster would hardly pass the election threshold.
The poll shows that Serbians trust most the local Orthodox Church with 26 percent of respondents placing the highest trust in it. The military (15.8 percent) and the police (10.1) follow on this list.