President Donald Trump has thought a lot about Ohio in the past week.

He tweeted repeatedly this weekend about General Motors' closure this month of a manufacturing plant in Lordstown, Ohio, lashing out at GM and union leaders.

"Get that big, beautiful plant in Ohio open now," Trump tweeted Sunday. "Close a plant in China or Mexico, where you invested so heavily pre-Trump, but not in the U.S.A. Bring jobs home!"

On Wednesday, Trump will travel to a tank facility in Lima, Ohio to highlight his defense spending andraise money for his re-election bid. It's his first visit to Ohio since the 2018 midterm elections.

Are Ohioans thinking about Trump?

Yes, but maybe not in the way the president would like.

Recent polls have shown Trump's popularity continuing to dip in the state he won by eight percentage points in 2016.

Since taking office in 2017, Trump's net approval rating in Ohio has dropped 19 percentage points, according to non-profit polling firm Morning Consult. The "net approval rating" is the gap between an approval rating and a disapproval rating.

Trump still has friends in Ohio. But he's divided the state, with 50 percent of Ohioans polled by Morning Consult now saying they disapprove of Trump compared with 45 percent who like the job he has done.

The margin for error for Morning Consult's Ohio portion of the poll is plus or minus 1 percentage point in Ohio. It was conducted from Jan. 20 to Feb. 28.

When Trump took office in Jan. 2017, Morning Consult found 51 percent of Ohioans approved of him and 37 percent didn't.

Ohio's numbers are slightly better than Trump's the averages nationwide, with Trump's disapproval rating hovering between 52 percent and 55 percent since January 1, according to Real Clear Politics. Trump's average net approval rating has dropped 11 percentage points nationally since he took office.

Trump has lost credibility with some voters. Or at least hasn't gained any.

When U.S. Rep. Steve Chabot held some town halls in the region in February, he heard much dissatisfaction of Trump, with some calling the president a liar.

"I was wondering why is it taking so long to impeach the most-lying president in history?" asked Francine Hill, a 90-year-old resident of Lincoln Heights.

The Washington Post this past November tallied 6,420 false or misleading claims the president had made up to that point.

Yet Trump hasn't lost Ohio yet.

Trump's popularity has taken a much bigger hit in other states. Every state has had at least a 10 percentage point drop in Trump's net approval ratings since Jan. 2017, according to Morning Consult, and 27 states have the same or bigger dip than Ohio's.

Republicans are sticking by the president, with Morning Consult showing 85 percent of Republican nationwide still approving of Trump.

As Ohio swings more Republican, some Democratic groups don't see Ohio as the key presidential swing state it once was. Priorities USA, the largest Democratic Party super PAC, which invested heavily in the campaigns of Barack Obama and Hillary Clinton, didn't list Ohio has one of its nine key states in the group's battleground briefing for 2020 released last month.

Some Democratic candidates still have Ohio on their itineraries. Former Texas congressman Beto O'Rourke stopped by a restaurant in Cleveland on Monday. It was a small venue, but he packed it to capacity with supporters.

As for that General Motors' plant in Lordstown, the company and the United Autoworkers' union responded in statements to Trump's tweet saying they're working on it.

"We're doing everything we can," UAW president Dave Green said in a statement.

"GM plans to discuss our fate with the UAW in the fall, and we are focused on getting a new product in Lordstown."