A new SurveyUSA poll reveals most voters aren’t big fans of House Minority Leader Nancy Pelosi, including her constituents in the wildly liberal state of California.

“Democrat Nancy Pelosi has a Minus 9 Net Job Approval today – 36% of voters statewide approve of the job the House Minority Leader is doing; 45% disapprove,” according to the results released Tuesday. “Even in Pelosi’s backyard, the Bay Area, she is under water: 39% of voters there approve of the job she is doing, 42% disapprove.”

The poll involved 882 registered voters interviewed between March 22 and 25.

Their distaste for Pelosi was consistent across gender and most ages and races, with the exception of those 18-34, blacks and Asians who approve of her job performance by slim margins.

The poll serves as the latest reminder that while the 78-year-old career politician remains a strong fundraiser for her party, her polarizing politics, repeated public gaffes, and wacky policy ideas are taking a toll on her support and ability to lead.

The Mercury News in March surveyed 34 California Democrats running for Congress, and only two would publicly commit to backing Pelosi as Speaker of the House if Democrats take control of the lower chamber in 2018.

“They’ll take her money – they just don’t want to take her embrace,” Jack Pitney, political science professor at Claremont McKenna College, told the news site.

“Republicans have used her as a political piñata,” he said. “There’s probably more to lose than to gain by explicitly pledging to support her.”

That’s a lesson incoming Rep. Conor Lamb recently learned during a special election in a traditionally Republican district in Pennsylvania, where he narrowly prevailed over his Republican challenger by keeping Pelosi at arms length.

Though the House Minority Leader endorsed Lamb, he refused to do the same, and even produced television and print ads to make it clear he would oppose her continued leadership in the House.

Retired marine colonel Doug Applegate, running for a seat in California’s 49th district, seems to share Lamb’s perspective.

“We can do better,” he told the News. “We need to move in a different direction.”

Pelosi, meanwhile, doesn’t seem overly concerned about the growing opposition, which The New York Times noted is “not just centrist candidates running in red-tinged districts who are reluctant to embrace her, but also political insurgents on the left who see her as an embodiment of the Washington establishment.”

“I am a master legislator, I am a shrewd politician and I have a following in the country that, apart from a presidential candidate, nobody else can claim,” she boasted to the Times. “If I were to walk away now, this caucus would be in such a musical chairs scenario.”