While Donald Trump spent much of the past year confounding critics with his head-spinning ability to transform each new gaffe into higher poll numbers, the billionaire’s primary campaign magic seems to be wearing off as the general election gets underway. Over the last two weeks, the presumptive G.O.P. nominee has found countless new ways to offend his foes and alienate his allies, from his racist attacks on a federal judge, to publicly celebrating his own foresight in the hours after a horrific mass shooting, to suggesting that the president of the United States is a secret terrorist agent. And the polls, finally, are beginning to register the nation’s disgust.

After several weeks of polls that showed Hillary Clinton only a few points ahead of Trump, and two that put her lead within the margin of error, Bloomberg on Tuesday released a poll giving the former secretary of state a whopping 12-point lead on Trump in a head-to-head matchup. CBS released a poll as well, showing her maintaining a six-point lead over Trump. A popular vote with results in that range would lead to an electoral landslide, too: according to a Frontloading HQ analysis, released Monday, Clinton destroys Trump in the electoral college, 358 to 180. Last week, an ABC poll showed her winning the national map with 262 to 191, assuming Trump takes all the Republican-leaning states.

Clinton’s favorability ratings, too, are better relative to Trump’s rapidly tanking numbers. Another ABC poll shows Trump at a 70 percent unfavorability rating, only one point away from his highest unfavorable score ever, which is still much higher than Clinton’s high of 55 percent. (In an election where both the candidates are widely unpopular, Clinton will likely take victories where she can find them.) Another survey, published Wednesday by CBS, found that while Americans were divided by Clinton’s response to the recent mass shooting in Orlando (36 percent approved, 34 percent disapproved), a clear majority of respondents were appalled by Trump’s reaction, which involved both patting himself on the back and accusing Barack Obama of secretly harboring terrorist sympathies.

Suggesting that Obama, the nation’s first black president, is in cahoots with ISIS, was just one of the offensive Trumpian comments unleashed in the last several days. Last week, the billionaire’s race-based attack against the Mexican-American judge presiding over two class-action lawsuits against Trump University horrified even his Republican allies, who were nearly unanimous in condemning his remarks. In the wake of that disaster, Trump said he would be changing his own campaign slogan to the more inclusive “Make America Great Again for Everyone,” but within days, was back to accusing the Muslim-American community of purposefully harboring potential terrorists, doubled down on a plan to ban Muslims from entering the U.S., and suggested that mosques should be placed under surveillance.

As disturbing as Trump’s latest outbursts are, however, a large percentage of the electorate is still responding positively to his xenophobic ramblings. The same Bloomberg poll that gave Clinton a 12-point lead also shows her lagging Trump when it comes to national security, albeit narrowly. Clinton has been adept, so far, at preventing Trump from outflanking her team on terror-related issues. And the most recent polling seems to indicate that she, not Trump, benefited from her firm, dignified response to Sunday’s mass shooting. But in an election where the billionaire’s divisive rhetoric propelled him to the top of the Republican heap, it’s quite possible that, with enough terror-fueled fear, Trump could ride that wave high enough to beat Clinton. There are, after all, 145 days left before the election.