After surveys of North Carolina voters were published seemingly every day last week, Monday started that momentum once again as two North Carolina-specific polls were released.

Both surveys have Democratic candidates leading their respective Republican counterparts in races for the President and United States Senate.

Presidential candidate Hillary Clinton held a two-point lead in a survey released by High Point University over Donald Trump. Clinton’s lead grew to three points in a Meredith College poll.

In the race for North Carolina’s seat United States Senate up for election this fall, challenger Deborah Ross finds herself ahead of incumbent Richard Burr by a single point in the High Point poll and three points, according to the Meredith survey.

All of those results were within the margin of error for each survey.

But there was a deviation in the two surveys in the race for governor in North Carolina.

The Meredith College poll showed incumbent Republican Governor Pat McCrory with a two-point lead over his Democratic challenger Attorney General Roy Cooper.

While the survey shows McCrory with a 41/39 lead, 14 percent of respondents said they still didn’t know who they would vote for as we’re a month and a half away from Election Day.

The survey results from High Point swung the opposite way in the gubernatorial race.

Cooper held an eight-point lead over McCrory, according to the High Point numbers.

Real Clear Politics shows an aggregate number from the survey results as an average, which shows Cooper with a 3.5-point lead, Ross up one point and Trump up .8 of a point.

That shows that North Carolina continues to be a closely divided state as Election Day is quickly approaching.