A poll commissioned by Raycom News Network released Wednesday found that Republican Roy Moore is continuing to hold a significant lead over Democrat Doug Jones in Alabama's Senate race.

Conducted by Mobile-based Strategy Research, the poll said that Moore had 51 percent of support to 40 percent for Jones. And 9 percent of poll participants declared themselves undecided.

It's the exact same results from a poll last month commissioned by Raycom and conducted by Strategy Research.

"I think there is an easy explanation," Jonathan Gray of Strategy Research told Raycom. "People are not paying attention (to the race) right now."

The poll sampled 2,200 likely Senate race voters on Monday with a margin of error of 2 percent.

Gray, a Republican pollster, told AL.com last month that he expected the Senate race to tighten up and he repeated that position to Raycom.

"I just think it's going to be late in the cycle when it gets tighter," Gray said.

The Jones campaign took issue with the recent history of polls conducted by Strategy Research. A July poll had Robert Kennedy Jr. with 49 percent of the support in the Democratic primary while Jones had 28 percent. Less than a month later, Jones won the Democratic nomination with 64 percent of the vote in an eight-candidate field.

The same July poll had Luther Strange leading Moore by two points but Moore beat Strange by six points in the GOP primary.

"Partisan pollster Jon Gray has a clear conflict of interest and his polling has been embarrassingly inaccurate in the Democratic primary for this seat, in the Republican runoff, and now is wrong in the general election," the Jones campaign said in a statement.

"While we don't put much stock in polls prior to Election Day, one thing is clear - Alabama sees through Doug Jones and his radical left-wing agenda," Moore campaign chair Bill Armistead said in a statement. "Doug is a liberal trial lawyer, an Obama 2012 delegate, and a supporter of the radical policies of Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren."

It's the latest in a series of polls that have indicated Moore has strong support in his bid to win the seat vacated by Jeff Sessions.

Moore's advantage has ranged from 6 to 11 points, though a Senate Leadership Fund poll - which has already announced its support of Moore - commissioned a poll that found Moore with a 17-point lead.

A Fox News poll sampled registered voters instead of likely voters last month and found the race was tied.

Click here to read the full report from Raycom on the poll.

Updated today, Nov. 8, 2017, at 5:21 p.m. with new information and a comment from the Jones campaign.

Updated today, Nov. 8, 2017, at 8:25 p.m. with a comment from the Moore campaign.