More than half of registered voters disapprove of President Trump Donald John TrumpBarr criticizes DOJ in speech declaring all agency power 'is invested in the attorney general' Military leaders asked about using heat ray on protesters outside White House: report Powell warns failure to reach COVID-19 deal could 'scar and damage' economy MORE’s executive order on immigration and refugees, according to a new poll.

Fifty-two percent oppose the measure, which includes a 90-day ban on visitors from seven Muslim majority nations and a 120 day ban on all refugees, in the Fox News survey released Tuesday.

Forty-six percent approve of last month's controversial executive action, while 2 percent remain uncertain.

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Pollsters found that nearly half of all voters believe Trump’s temporary halt on people from Iraq, Iran, Libya, Somalia, Sudan, Syria and Yemen is extreme.

Forty-eight percent said the freeze “went too far,” while 12 percent said it “didn’t go far enough.” Thirty-eight percent said it was “about right” and 2 percent were uncertain.

Tuesday’s results showed that 56 percent see Trump’s order as a “restriction on terrorist hotspots," while 37 percent believe it is a “Muslim ban” instead; 3 percent think it is both and 4 percent were uncertain.

TheFox News poll reported that more than half of respondents also oppose the two other actions within Trump’s January order.

Fifty-one percent said banning all refugees from the U.S. for 120 days “went too far,” versus 7 percent who said it “didn’t go far enough,” 39 percent who said it was “about right” and 3 percent who were unsure.

Fifty-three percent said indefinitely blocking entry for Syrian refugees “went too far,” contrasted with 6 percent who felt it “didn’t go far enough,” 37 percent who said it was “about right” and 4 percent who were uncertain.

The 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled in a unanimous 3-0 decision last week to freeze the implementation of Trump’s policy nationwide.

A federal judge in Seattle said Monday that district court proceedings on Trump’s order would continue, even as the appeals court weighs whether to rehear the case.

U.S. District Judge James Robart ordered both sides in the legal battle to continue on Monday, while the San Francisco-based 9th Circuit mulls rehearing an earlier decision on the case.

An unknown judge on the court requested Friday that it vote on whether to rehear the case through an “en banc” review, a process which would task an 11-judge panel with reviewing the case.

A majority of judges on the 9th Circuit would need to agree to review the case, which could also result in another hearing over its merits.

Fox News conducted its latest survey of 1,013 registered voters via cellphone and landline telephone interviews Feb. 11-13. It has a 3 percent margin of error.