The latest swing state polls reveal that some states are leaning heavily toward our current president while others are deciding to unanimously back up his Republican competitor.

Swing states New Hampshire and Nevada were surveyed in a presidential poll, conducted by ARG. Results revealed Romney's lead by 2 percent in New Hampshire (49 to 47) and Obama's lead by 2 percent in Nevada. The polls were conducted from Oct. 19 until Oct. 22, according to the Examiner.

In a Forum/Essman presidential poll conducted in North Dakota, Mitt Romney had a 25 percent lead: Obama was at 32 percent and Romney at 57 percent, the Examiner added. The results were released on October 23, 2012.

The 2012 swing states are Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Nevada, New Hampshire, North Caroline, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Virginia and Wisconsin, according to Politico. In their report, updated on Tuesday at 3 p.m., Romney is in the lead for "swing-state votes:" 66 over Obama's 44 for swing-state Electoral votes. However, Obama is in the lead for the "Leaning/Likely State Votes" - 237 to 191.

The polling data they use is provided by Real Clear Politics. Based on their findings, Politico reported that Romney will receive all 29 Electoral votes from Florida, all 15 from North Carolina and all 13 from Virginia. Obama, on the other hand, is believed to receive all 18 Electoral votes from Ohio, all 10 from Wisconsin, and all the Electoral votes New Hampshire, Nevada and Iowa have to offer.

In their own swing-state tracking poll, Rasmussen Reports revealed on Tuesday that Mitt Romney earned 50 percent of the vote to Obama's 45 percent. Other voters liked another candidate (2 percent) or were undecided (4 percent).

They also noted that these recent findings mark the third time Romney has hit the "50 percent mark in the combined swing states in the past four days and is the biggest lead either candidate has held in nearly three weeks."

All of the interviews for their Tuesday update were completed before the end of last night's presidential debate.

It is also important to note that Rasmussen calculates their "swing state tracking" with 11 states, or "key states won by President Obama in 2008 and thought to be competitive in 2012," whereas Politico declares there are only nine swing states.