In the new poll, Donald Trump leads Hillary Clinton by 18 points among white voters, while Clinton has a 35-point advantage among non-whites, 63 percent to 28 percent. | AP Photo Poll: Trump passes Clinton in Nevada

Donald Trump holds a narrow, 2-point advantage over Hillary Clinton in the battleground state of Nevada, according to a new Monmouth University survey.

Trump leads Clinton in the poll, 44 percent to 42 percent, with Libertarian Gary Johnson at 8 percent. Three percent of likely voters are undecided, and another 3 percent indicated they would vote for the “none of these candidates” option.

Republicans also have a slight edge in the closely watched race to succeed retiring Senate Minority Leader Harry Reid: GOP Rep. Joe Heck is 3 points ahead of Democrat Catherine Cortez Masto, 46 percent to 43 percent.

The survey is consistent with other public polls showing Trump and Clinton locked in a tight race for the state's six electoral votes. An NBC News/Wall Street Journal/Marist poll conducted last week had Clinton up 1 point in a head-to-head matchup, and Trump a point ahead in a subsequent question with third-party candidates included.

Clinton still retains a 1.4-point lead in POLITICO’s Battleground States polling average of Nevada surveys. The state voted for now-President Barack Obama in both 2008 and 2012

The results of the new survey indicate modest movement toward Trump over the past two months. In the previous Monmouth University poll, conducted in July, Clinton led by 4 points, 45 percent to 41 percent. (The changes are within the margin of error for each survey: plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.)

In the new poll, Trump leads Clinton by 18 points among white voters, while Clinton has a 35-point advantage among non-whites, 63 percent to 28 percent.

The poll was conducted Sept. 11-13, surveying 406 likely voters contacted off a list of registered voters. Respondents could only complete the survey in English; Monmouth pollster Patrick Murray said most Latinos on the voter rolls speak English.

It’s the second swing-state poll on Wednesday to show Trump ahead of Clinton, after a Bloomberg Politics survey gave Trump a 5-point lead over Clinton in Ohio, a vote-rich bellwether. Unlike the Bloomberg poll in Ohio, the new Monmouth Nevada survey was conducted entirely after Clinton’s health scare on Sunday in lower Manhattan.