Electoral College Map 2016 prediction, latest polls, news: Who will win the US election? Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton?

Republican U.S. presidential nominee Donald Trump speaks during the presidential town hall debate with Democratic U.S. presidential nominee Hillary Clinton at Washington University in St. Louis, Missouri, U.S., last Oct. 9.  | REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton

With the United States president election in two weeks, the data churned out by the Electoral College map is more important than ever.

A national poll by RealClearPolitics has Democratic presidential candidate Hillary Clinton in the lead with 48-percent, enjoying a 5.1 points margin over Republican candidate Donald Trump, who garnered 43-percent.

The site's Electoral College map still pegs Clinton as the winner through a dominating 272 votes over Trump's 126, showing a huge difference of 140.

In a poll conducted by the trusted Investor's Business Daily/TechnoMetrica Market Intelligence Tracking, which is reputed for accuracy in the past, suggests that presidential candidates Donald Trump and Hillary Clinton's votes are tied.

The survey shows 42 percent for Clinton with Trump trailing behind with a promising 41 percent. The difference is crucial as AL.com points out a margin of error.

The other two—Libertarian nominee Gary Johnson is at 8 percent and Green Party nominee Jill Stein—got eight percent and three- respectively. Almost 4 percent of those polled said they weren't sure who they were voting for.

According to the poll, Clinton has the votes of those in the Northeast while Trump performs higher in the South. The former leads in Arizona, North Carolina, Florida, Nevada, Pennsylvania, Colorado and Michigan while the latter has Georgia, Ohio and Iowa.

As analyzed by AL.com, the billionaire leads among voters between ages 45 to 64, men, and white. The former Secretary of State found more supporters in the 18-44 age bracket as well as those older than 65, women, black and Hispanic voters.

It is a very different scenario with ABC News Tracking and Bloomberg, which has Clinton an advantage of a whopping 12-percent advantage for the former and 9-percent lead for the latter, which IBD/TIPP pollster Raghavan Mayur said are too huge to be true.

Meanwhile, the Electoral College map by Fox Business Channel shows Trump is behind. Clinton wins in Texas with 307 electoral votes and Trump only has 174.

Redstate believes that it will be harder for Trump to win the presidential election in two weeks if these were accurate numbers.