Barack Obama with Donald Trump in the Oval Office on November 10 after a meeting to discuss transition plans. REUTERS/Kevin Lamarque

A new poll shows Americans aren't big fans of the new GOP healthcare bill and even like the old system better.

According to a poll from Public Policy Polling released Tuesday, 53% of those surveyed said they preferred the Affordable Care Act over the Republicans' American Health Care Act. Just 27% said they preferred the AHCA over the ACA.

In terms of simple approval, only 25% of those in the poll supported the AHCA, while 52% opposed it.

This comes as numerous other polls have shown the new GOP bill, also called Trumpcare, to be incredibly unpopular. Polls taken in the past two weeks showed approval ranging from a high of 38% to a low of just 21%. Disapproval has been anywhere from 44% to a solid majority of 56%.

At the same time, recent polls have shown that the ACA, better known as Obamacare, has hit its highest popularity ever. In the PPP poll, 44% of those surveyed said they supported the ACA, while 37% opposed it.

Sixty-four percent of people told PPP that lawmakers should "keep what works in the Affordable Care Act and fix what doesn’t," while 29% said Congress should "repeal the Affordable Care Act and start over with a new healthcare law."

In terms of political implications, some lawmakers who voted for the AHCA in the House faced angry town halls during a weeklong recess last week, and the PPP poll suggested their support for the bill may be a drag on their electoral chances.

Forty-seven percent of those surveyed told PPP that they would be less likely to vote for a representative who supported the AHCA, while only 27% of Americans said they would be more likely to vote for an AHCA supporter.