More Americans than ever support free trade with other major countries, according to a new survey, which comes amid President Trump’s ongoing spat with China over his protectionist policies.

Nearly two-thirds of Americans, or 64 percent — a new high — back free trade because they believe it’s good for the economy and say the country can’t avoid continued globalization, according to the poll by NBC News and The Wall Street Journal.

“While Trump plays a game of chicken on tariffs, a record number of Americans believe that free trade is good,” said Jeff Horwitt, the Democratic half of the bipartisan poll.

Americans’ opposition to free trade has collapsed over the past two years, falling from 37 percent in 2017 to just 27 percent in the latest survey, figures show.

The survey’s GOP pollster, Bill McInturff, said he attributes the dramatic shift to overwhelming opposition among Democratic voters to Trump.

“If Donald Trump is for it and you’re a Democrat, you move in a very different direction,” he told NBC News.

Trump’s critics say his tit-for-tat trade battle with Beijing has hurt American farmers and put new economic pressure on export-dependent European countries such as Germany, which sell goods to the Chinese.

The survey interviewed 1,000 people from Aug. 10 to Aug. 14 and has a margin of error of 3 percent.