After winning the presidential election with nearly 3 million fewer votes than his Democratic opponent, Donald Trump assumed the title of president-elect with a historically low approval rating of just 38 percent on Election Day. And his abysmal numbers haven’t improved much since. Despite a slight post-election bump, Trump’s favorables are slipping again as he prepares to take the oath of office with a record number of Americans opposed to his presidency.

While most new presidents are sworn in with some of the the highest approval ratings of their political careers, a slate of new polls find that Trump is the least popular in decades. A joint ABC/The Washington Post released Tuesday finds that Trump enters office with only 40 percent of respondents holding a favorable view of the president-elect, 21 points behind President Barack Obama’s current high of 61 percent, and the worst number for an incoming president since 1977. (Sixty-one percent, as it happens, is the same share of respondents who said they lack confidence in Trump’s ability to make the right decisions for the country’s future.)

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Trump’s poor numbers are obvious at a more granular level, too. Only 50 percent of Americans polled by ABC said they believed he could help the middle class and handle the budget deficit. Sixty-one percent had negative views of how he’ll handle women’s issues, and 57 percent view him unfavorably when it comes to race. As for Russia, 43 percent think Trump is “too friendly” towards the country and its leader, Vladimir Putin, and seven in 10 Americans believe that Russia tried to help him win the election. And Trump’s Cabinet choices—an untraditional bricolage of political neophytes, billionaires, and industry insiders—are equally disliked. According to the ABC/Post poll, only 40 percent approve of the president-elect’s nominees to serve in the White House, putting him 19 to 26 points behind his four most recent predecessors.

Other polls have found much the same. A Gallup survey released Monday found that Trump has by far the lowest favorability ratings of any recent incoming president, with only four in 10 viewing him favorably. Obama, by contrast, took the oath of office with 78 percent favorability; George W. Bush entered office at 62 percent, and Bill Clinton at 66 percent. While about 82 percent of Republicans approve of Trump—a double-digit increase since the election—Republican approval for the last Republican president, Bush, was nearly unanimous at 97 percent, suggesting even tribalism has a limit. And a Monmouth University Poll released on Tuesday had even grimmer results: only 34 percent of respondents approved of Trump, while 65 percent said they believe the country is on the wrong track.

Trump slammed the latest polling in a tweet Tuesday morning, calling the results “rigged” and suggesting the media is underestimating him in the same way that they did in the run-up to the presidential election.

All recent public opinion polling, however, suggests Trump’s historical unpopularity is all too real. A CNN/ORC poll released Tuesday also found the president-elect’s approval rating hovering at 40 percent in the days before his inauguration. A separate Gallup poll released Saturday showed dissatisfaction with his handling of the presidential transition process at 54 percent, with only 44 percent approving—an even worse result than the month before, when respondents were split 48-48 on his performance. And a Monmouth University Poll released on Tuesday had even grimmer results: only 34 percent of respondents approved of Trump, while 65 percent said they believed the country was on the wrong track.