Three weeks before election day, two Alabama Senate polls released Tuesday illustrated different pictures of the race between Democrat Doug Jones and Republican Roy Moore.

One poll commissioned by Raycom News Network in Alabama had the race in a statistical tie with Moore holding a 2-point lead while a poll released by Moore-friendly Breitbart News showed him with a 6-point lead.

Moore held an 11-point lead in a Raycom poll released the day before The Washington Post published allegations by women who said that, when they were teens, Moore made unwanted sexual and romantic overtures.

Moore has repeatedly denied the allegations.

The Raycom poll, conducted Monday, had Moore with 47 percent of the vote, Jones with 45 percent, 5 percent undecided and 3 percent planning to cast write-in votes. Raycom said 3,000 likely voters were surveyed by Mobile-based Strategy Research and that the poll has a margin of error of 2 percent.

When asked "what do you think about the allegations made against Roy Moore," 45% believe all or some of the allegations; 34% do not believe the allegations; and 21% believe some or all of the allegations, but say it has not changed their vote, according to Raycom.

Among Republicans, 48 percent said they did not believe any of the allegations while another 24 percent said they believe all or some of the allegations but it would not change their vote, Raycom said.

The Breitbart poll, conducted by WT&S Consulting, said it sampled 11,641 likely voters from Nov. 18-20. The poll had Moore at 46.4 percent and Jones at 40.5 percent with 13.1 percent undecided.

The poll had a margin of error of 1.2 percent.

A previous Breitbart poll, also conducted by WT&S Consulting after the allegations, had Moore with an 11-point lead.

WT&S Consulting did work for Moore's campaign during the Republican primary earlier this year. John Wahl, the firm's chief political officer, has worked for previous Moore campaigns as well.

Updated Nov. 22, 2017, at 10:15 a.m. to add the day the Raycom poll was conducted.