It's the same polling outfit that has conducted previous Atlanta Journal-Constitution polls, most recently in January, though this one wasn't commissioned by the newspaper.

The poll pegged Trump’s approval rating in Georgia at roughly 54%, the latest encouraging number for the president as he races to keep the state in the GOP column. Democrats hope to flip Georgia for the first time in a presidential race since 1992, when Bill Clinton carried the state.

It showed a yawning gender gap in the race for president, with Trump snagging about 60% of the likely male voters and Democrats with roughly half of women voters. Voters who are 45 and older solidly backed the president, while younger voters were more likely to support the Democratic challengers.

The race for Loeffler’s seat, a free-for-all contest with no primaries to filter out nominees, is as volatile as ever. And one-third of voters were undecided, including 40% of African-American voters.

Loeffler, a financial executive who took office in January, tallied 19% of support and Collins had 21% - within the margin of error. Collins has a 9-point lead among Republicans, while Loeffler has a slight edge with independents.

Lieberman, an entrepreneur and political newcomer, led the Democratic field with 11% of the vote. Trailing him with 6% of the vote is Raphael Warnock, the establishment-backed candidate who recently entered the race. Former prosecutor Ed Tarver had about 4% of the vote.

Georgia’s other U.S. Senate race was not polled. That contest pits Republican incumbent David Perdue against three top challengers competing to challenge him: Sarah Riggs Amico, Jon Ossoff and Teresa Tomlinson.

>>More: 'A circus.' Georgia candidates race to qualify for office

>>More: Qualifying week: A surge of candidates run for election

>>More: Loeffler's allies are playing hardball in Georgia Senate clash with Collins

>>More: 'More than fishy' Collins slams sudden cash surge for pro-Loeffler group