In the latest poll, Johnson is faring better than Trump, who trails Clinton by seven points.

It’s unclear what impact, if any, Trump’s troubles are having on the U.S. Senate race, though Feingold’s campaign issued a statement linking Trump to Johnson. After downplaying the Loras College poll earlier in the day, the campaign characterized the race as “close.”

“Sen. Johnson is trying to hide his record of protecting a system that benefits corporations and multimillionaires like himself in a desperate attempt to stay in Washington and save his political career,” spokesman Michael Tyler said. “And he’s continuing to cling to Donald Trump, despite the fact that his Republican colleagues are repudiating his disgusting actions.”

Johnson’s campaign issued an internal memo touting Johnson’s $4 million fundraising haul in the third quarter and more than 2 million voter contacts. Feingold has yet to release his third-quarter fundraising figures.

“As we’ve consistently said, this is going to be a tight race with a real choice for Wisconsinites – between an Oshkosh manufacturer getting things done and a 34-year career politician saying one thing and doing another,” Johnson spokesman Brian Reisinger said.