Bernie Sanders overtook Hillary Clinton in a national poll for the first time. | AP Photo Here are all the polls you missed today

It was a big day for polls. With just two days to go before voters make their choices in South Carolina (for Republicans) and Nevada (for Democrats), various outlets released a slew of data, much of it confusing and contradictory. Perhaps the biggest news is Bernie Sanders overtaking Hillary Clinton in a national poll — Fox News — for the first time.

Here are the other polls you might have missed amid the flurry of numbers:


National polls

Fox News: Bernie Sanders leads Hillary Clinton for the first time in a national poll, 47 percent to her 44 percent. That's a reversal from January, when she led the Vermont senator 49 percent to 37 percent.

NBC News/Wall Street Journal: Clinton leads Sanders 53 percent to 42 percent. But that same poll last month had the former secretary of state at 59 percent and the Vermont senator at 34 percent.

Fox News: Donald Trump leads the GOP field with 36 percent. Behind him: Texas Sen. Ted Cruz at 19 percent, Florida Sen. Marco Rubio’s at 15 percent. Former Florida Gov. Jeb Bush and retired neurosurgeon Ben Carson both have 9 percent and Ohio Gov. John Kasich has 8 percent.

CBS News: Trump leads Cruz 35 percent to 18 percent. Rubio has 12 percent and Kasich has 11 percent, followed by Carson with 6 percent and Bush with 4 percent.



South Carolina polls

Fox News: Clinton holds a large lead over Sanders in the state, 56 percent to his 28 percent, but it has narrowed since the same poll was taken in December, when she led 65 percent to 21 percent. The Fox poll found Clinton with strong African-American support (63 percent to his 21 percent), but that too has shrunk since December, when 82 percent supported her and just 11 percent supported him.

Fox News: Trump leads the field with 32 percent. Behind him are Cruz at 19, Rubio at 15, Carson and Bush at 9, and Kasich bringing up the rear at 6 percent.

Bloomberg Politics: Clinton leads Sanders 53 percent to his 31 percent. Among African Americans, she leads 59 percent to his 20 percent. Sanders enjoys a small lead with white voters — 45 to 42 — but has a much higher margin among whites under 45 (67 percent to 22 percent).

Monmouth University: Clinton leads Sanders 59 percent to 30 percent. That’s a 9 percent bump for Sanders from the same poll in November, when the Vermont senator had 21 percent.