Now, that the smoke has cleared from the third debate, from the Wikileaks, and from the Trump scandals, how have the polls been affected? Moreover, will Trump emerge with more electoral votes from the aftermath of the debate and the week leading up to it?

With the IBD/TIPP, the most accurate polling organization in American history, still having Trump up in the national polls by 2, and the latest Reuter’s poll having Trump quickly gaining on Clinton, it seems that this election might be shifting from a landslide to a neck and neck race.

Oddly enough, spite these two polls having Trump pushing up positive ground, ABC News Poll has Hillary Clinton polling in the double digits at 12. How can the difference between these polls be so dramatic? – meaning one poll is painting a picture of a landslide while the others are showing a possible photographed finish. The answer is obviously regarding who it is that these polls are polling.

When it comes to the IBD/TIPP, they take an average of many demographics which include age, location, gender, and ethnicity, along with many other metrics, which you can see here.

ABC also conducted their polls by surveying many demographics both by land and cellular phones of 824 likely voters with a 3.5 margin of error. You can look at the poll here.

However, even with a margin of error of 3.5 points, it at most could knock the poll down to 8 points. There is still a significant difference between having Trump up by 2 points and Hillary up by 8 points. That is still a 10 point margin of error difference between the 2 polls.

The Reuter’s Poll  shows that the aftermath of last week has revealed Hillary went from a 7 point lead to a 4 point lead, losing a momentum of 3 points. Reuters suggests that this hike in Trump’s numbers may be related to his “rigged system” message that he has been propagating since the scandals begun.

The question now is: which poll is telling the most accurate story? More importantly, how will the results of these polls affect voter turn-out on Nov. 8th?