WASHINGTON – A new poll shows President Trump’s approval rating holding “remarkably stable” in the days following the conviction of former campaign Chairman Paul Manafort and the plea deal involving his onetime personal lawyer, Michael Cohen.

The Wall Street Journal and NBC News polled registered voters from Aug. 18 to Aug. 22 and found that Trump had an approval rating of 46 percent, with 51 percent disapproving.

The Cohen and Manafort news dropped Aug. 21.

Pollsters then commissioned a supplemental poll from Aug. 22 to Aug. 25, finding that Trump’s approval rating moved down to 44 percent, with 52 percent disapproving — numbers that are within the survey’s margin of error.

Republican pollster Bill McInturff, whose Public Opinion Strategies conducted the survey alongside Democratic pollster Peter Hart of Hart Research Associates, dubbed Trump’s approval rating “remarkably stable” on the heels of the Cohen and Manafort developments.

Still, not all the nuggets contained in the poll were good news for Trump.

For instance, 46 percent of registered voters said they strongly disagreed that Trump had been “honest and truthful when it comes to the investigation into Russian interference with the 2016 presidential election and related matters.”

The poll found that only 21 percent agreed with the statement.

When respondents were told that six members of Trump’s campaign team — including Cohen and Manafort — had now been found guilty or pleaded guilty to crimes, 40 percent of registered voters said they believed the crimes could potentially extend to the president. Twenty-seven percent said the crimes were limited to the campaign-team members. Another 30 percent said they didn’t have enough information to say.

Additionally, a majority of respondents had heard about the Cohen and the Manafort cases.

Forty-six percent said they heard “a lot” of news about Cohen, while 34 percent had heard some news about Cohen. Just 20 percent said they hadn’t seen news coverage about the ex-Trump lawyer.

Another 46 percent said they heard “a lot” of news about Manafort, while 38 percent said they had heard some news about Manafort, who was convicted of five tax fraud charges, two counts of bank fraud and one charge of hiding bank accounts. Fourteen percent said they hadn’t heard a peep about Manafort.

For context, NBC News compared the percentage of voters aware of the Manafort and Cohen stories to that of the “Bridgegate” scandal that hobbled former New Jersey Gov. Chris Christie. More voters, 95 percent, were aware of the “Access Hollywood” tape that came out a month before the 2016 presidential election, in which Trump said he would grab women “by the p – – – -.”