A poll that has been tracking the same group of voters throughout the general election and has typically favored Donald Trump now shows a tie in the presidential race.

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are each at 44 percent in the LA Times survey.

Trump’s six point lead over Clinton evaporated after a video of him making lewd comments about his conduct toward women emerged.

A poll that’s been tracking the same group of voters throughout the general election and has typically favored Donald Trump now shows a tie in the presidential election

Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump are each at 44 percent in the LA Times survey. Trump’s six point lead over Clinton evaporated as a video of him making lewd comments about his conduct toward women emerged

The last time the candidates tracked so closely together in the LA Times poll was early September, when Clinton opened up her campaign plane to press and held her first news conference of 2016.

Her near collapse at a 9/11 memorial and subsequent revelation that she had pneumonia and didn’t tell anyone, leaving even her daughter, Chelsea, and staff in the dark, sent Trump soaring.

The Republican White House nominee kept his lead in the LA Times survey following the first presidential debate as other pollsters recorded six point swings in Clinton’s direction.

A Reuters/Ipsos poll published Wednesday had Clinton seven points ahead of Trump at 44 to 37 points among likely voters. Libertarian Gary Johnson is at 6 and Green Party nominee Stein is at 2. The fieldwork was done Oct. 6-10.

And in a Rasmussen poll also published Wednesday, which was mostly taken after the second debate, the gap has narrowed between Clinton and Trump to four points, at 43 to 39.

Clinton started the week leading 45 points to the Republican's 38. The seven-point lead was her biggest ever as Trump was hit by tape-gate.

The rolling survey, published daily, was conducted October 9-11 - mostly after the St Louis, Missouri debate on Sunday. It appears to show that Trump has regained lost ground since the aggressive standoff.

Trump was in need of a comeback, after the publication of the 2005 tape of him making braggadocious remarks about how his celebrity status allowed him to grab women by the genitals. The footage hurt his candidacy in every major survey of voters.

A poll put in the field by The Atlantic a couple days before the leak, which ran until the second presidential debate, had Clinton 11 points ahead.

NBC News, working alongside the Wall Street Journal, observed the same trend. Clinton left Trump in the dust, earning 46 percent of voters’ support to his 35 percent in a four-way race with Gary Johnson and Jill Stein.

Clinton’s advantage jumped to 14 points in a head-to-head matchup, NBC/WSJ found.

The Rasmussen poll published Wednesday shows how Trump has recovered since tape-gate, partly at Clinton's expense

Clinton is on track to surpass Trump in the LA Times daily survey unless he turns things around fast

LA Times has been polling the same pool of voters every day for months. The total sample of the electorate it relies on has 3,000 people in it, though they do not all respond every day.

Almost all of the news publication’s voters have been responsive since the Trump tape came out. The billionaire has dropped two points and Clinton has inched up by three. She’s on track to surpass Trump in the survey unless he turns things around.

Clinton may already be ahead of Trump in with those voters – the LA Times uses weighted averages from the previous week in its tabulations.

‘That means results have less volatility than some other polls, but also means the poll lags somewhat in responding to major events in the campaign,’ it says.