2016 Electoral College Map Projections: Clinton most likely to win

Hillary Clinton reacts as she boards her campaign plane at Miami international airport in Miami, Florida. | REUTERS/Carlos Barria

Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton will most likely win the election on Nov. 8, according to most electoral college map projections.

The electoral college map from Real Clear Politics shows Clinton leading against Republican presidential nominee Donald Trump with 252 to 126 electoral votes. The map marks Pennsyvania, Texas and Georgia as toss-ups leaving 160 electoral votes available to both candidates.

Clinton gets 333 electoral votes in the "No Toss Ups" map while Trump has 205. A candidate must secure at least 270 to win the election.

The latest forecast from FiveThirtyEight predicts that Clinton will win against the Republican candidate at 337.6 to 199.1 electoral votes. She has 49.7 percent of the popular vote while Trump has 43.1 percent. The Democratic candidate currently has an 85.7 chance of winning while Trump only has 14.3 percent.

Princeton Election Consortium shows the former secretary of state securing 218 electoral votes while Trump has 164. Both leading candidates are tied in Ohio.

Clinton is far ahead with 352 electoral votes against Trump with 173 in Sabato's Crystal Ball. Utah and Indiana with 6 electoral votes each are marked as toss-ups in the electoral college map.

The latest forecast from Upshot says Clinton has a 92 percent chance of winning the election leaving Trump with only 8 percent. The Democratic candidate got 98 percent from Huffington Post and 90 percent from PredictWise. She is also favored to win in the forecasts from Princeton, Daily Kos and the Cook Political Report.

Clinton is maintaining her lead in the latest polls as reported by Real Clear Politics. In the Fox News poll, Clinton is ahead by 4 points against Trump at 49 to 44 percent. She has a 6-point lead against the business magnate at 43 to 37 percent in the Reuters/IPSOS poll. Trump leads by one point against Clinton at 45 to 44 percent in the L.A. Times/USC tracking poll.

Republican vice presidential candidate Mike Pence has voiced his skepticism about some of the poll results while speaking to an audience at Catawba College in North Carolina.

"It's frankly obvious what the media's trying to do, just over the last few days. They're trying to refer to some polling data to try to roll this campaign up. Well, the polls I'm looking at — Rasmussen's got us up 2 across the country," said Pence.

"Investor's Business Daily has us up 1 across the country, and here in North Carolina, it's a 1-point race. This race is on, North Carolina. Don't let them spin you any other way. Don't be fooled. This race is on," he added.