On his last day before facing judgment at the polls, Gov. Andrew Cuomo returned to Brooklyn and made his case for state Senate candidate Andrew Gournardes, who is trying to unseat Republican Senator Martin Golden.

"We are not just going to get Democrats,” Cuomo said. “We are going to get Republicans, we are going to get independents, they are all going to come out and they are going to vote for Andrew."

A weekend poll showed the gap between Cuomo and Republican Marc Molinaro narrowing, particularly among suburban voters. We asked the governor if that spells trouble for Democrats looking to regain control of the Senate in suburban swing districts.

"No, first you always have a narrowing of the polls as you come toward Election Day. Because the expression is people go home,”  Cuomo said. “Registered Republicans identify with the Republican candidate, registered Democrats identify with the Democratic candidate."

Molinaro was joined by former governor George Pataki, who said not to put too much stock in polls that show Molinaro down by more than 10 points.

"The polls are closing. I saw one that had him down slightly below double digits,” Pataki said. “He was closer than the polls had me back in 1994 when the polls generally showed me 14 to 16 points behind Mario Cuomo."

Molinaro says his team has found that when voters punch in information on Google about their polling place, they get redirected to Cuomo's website.

"If you in fact ask Google who has paid for the ads, it comes up as an ny.gov paid-for ad. So someone with access and use of the ny.gov domain is pushing that message forward,” Molinaro said.

We were unable to find that same search result when we typed in similar information. The Cuomo campaign says it paid for ads on Google to provide voters with poll site information.

It's a bit of a cliché, but at some point pencils go down and the candidates must put their faith in the voters. Democrats feel like the momentum and enthusiasm is on their side, but rain in the forecast and other factors could also suppress turnout. As they say in this business, it all comes down to turnout.