Cynical voters want a third party and many believe the November election results will be rigged, a poll shows.

A clear majority, 57 percent, of those surveyed in Gallup’s annual governance poll say a third major political party should exist. Only 37 percent believe two parties are doing just fine representing Americans.

The number of those who favor moving beyond a two-party system is higher than it was in 2012, when 46 percent said more than two parties were needed.

The poll was conducted between Sept. 7 and 11.

Despite those views, the two third-party candidates in this presidential election are struggling to gain traction.

In national polls on a four-way contest, Libertarian Party nominee Gary Johnson is hovering at 7 percent and Green Party nominee Jill Stein has just above 2 percent, according to the Real Clear Politics polling average.

Meanwhile, half of Donald Trump’s supporters believe the GOP nominee’s assertions that the results of the election will be “rigged,” according to a September AP-NORC poll.

But 59 percent of Democratic voters said they have a “great deal of confidence” in accurate election tallies.

Among all voters, 31 percent say they do not believe the vote count for president this year will be accurate, while 29 percent are “moderately confident” and another 39 percent have a “great deal of confidence,” the poll found.

And a third of Americans believe there is a great deal of voter fraud in US elections. About two in five say there is some fraud, despite little evidence it is a widespread problem.