With less than a month to go for Election Day, Democrats promise a strong lead in a generic congressional poll conducted by CNN. According to the poll, 54 percent of voters claim they will be voting in favor of the Democratic candidate in their district, while only 41 percent of voters said they’re leaning towards their GOP candidate.

The CNN survey, released on Tuesday and conducted by SSRS, presents the widest margin seen in a midterm cycle since 2006 with the Democratic party at the lead.

In 2006, Democrats held a 21-point advantage over the GOP and managed to flip 31 seats of the House, taking control of the lower chamber. In these upcoming midterm elections, Democrats will only have to win over 23 seats to regain the majority of the House.

A study published by Politico on Tuesday revealed 209 of the elections for seats are strongly leaning towards the Democratic party, leaving Democrats only nine seats short of claiming majority of the House of Representatives. 26 seats were also ranked as toss-ups by Politico, meaning they could sway towards either party.

Politico also reported 68 of Republican House seats are currently hanging by a thread, rated as “Lean Republican”, or even leaning towards the Democratic candidate of the district. Politico attributes the current shift in the political atmosphere “to the searing fight over Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh.”

A Morning Consult poll showed 46 percent of Americans believe the Senate made the wrong decision regarding now Supreme Court Judge Brett Kavanaugh, while 40 percent say it was right to confirm his position in the high court. Strategists claim the Republican’s decision may have animated Democrats and spiked a high in the party’s support.

Amongst the Democratic party’s strongest group of supporters are women, with 63 percent saying they will be voting Democratic on Election Day, according to CNN’s joint poll with the SSRS. Men, on the other hand, have 50 percent voting Republican whilst 45 percent are rooting for their district’s Democratic candidates.

Democrats’ enthusiasm to vote is also through the roof, with 62 percent of voters claiming they’re extremely enthusiastic to go to the ballots on November 6. The polling shows a 7 percent vote increase in Democrats’ enthusiasm to vote, while there was only a 2 percent increase on the Republican side, as was reported by CNN.

Yet not everything is downhill for the Republican party, who is still beating the Democrats in terms of expectations. Half of Americans, an exact 50 percent, currently expect Republicans will win the majority of House seats. Whereas only 34 percent of voters believe the Democratic party will be able to flip 23 seats in its favor.

The number went down from a survey published in August, when 40 percent of Democrats believed the Democratic party could take control of the lower chamber. Voters’ faith on the Democratic party has also slimmed down by 2 percent, given only 38 percent of those interviewed consider the country would be better off with a Democratic majority in the House of Representatives.

According to CNN’s article, voters also trust Democrats will handle issues on health care (54 percent to 36 percent) and immigration (49 percent to 42 percent) better than Republicans. However, the GOP still leads voters’ trust on economic issues with 48 percent of voters in their favor.

With the days counting down before voters start heading to the polls, the seats for the House of Representatives are still highly contested. At the time, Democrats hold a 13 percent advantage over Republicans, yet whether the party will win over the majority of seats of the lower chamber will only be confirmed on the first week of November.