Donald Trump got a slight bump in support across battleground states following the Republican National Convention and has pulled ahead of Democrat Hillary Clinton, according to new polling out Sunday.

The GOP nominee’s support is at 42 percent, up from the 40 percent he had heading into last week’s convention, compared to Clinton who remains the same at 41 percent, according to new a CBS News Battleground Tracker poll.

Libertarian Gary Johnson has 6 percent support and Green Party candidate Jill Stein is at 2 percent. Another 6 percent are undecided and 3 percent said they support someone else.

Trump’s bump came from voters who were undecided last week and not from previous Clinton supporters. Thirty-six percent of those surveyed said the Republican convention made them feel more positive toward Trump; whereas 32 percent said they felt more negative toward the GOP nominee.

Clinton continues to do better among women (43 percent support, compared to 39 percent for Trump); whereas Trump does best among men (44 -39 percent).

Overall, Trump’s “law and order” heavy speech made viewers feel scared (36 percent), followed by hopeful (30 percent), pessimistic (27 percent) and enthusiastic (24 percent), the survey found.

The poll was conducted among 2,131 registered voters across 11 battleground states of Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, North Carolina, New Hampshire, Nevada, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin.