Six months into his presidency, only 38 percent of Americans have a favorable rating of Donald Trump and 73 percent said they don’t trust what they hear from the White House, a new poll out shows.

Overall, 56 percent of those surveyed disapprove of the job Trump is doing, a 5 percentage point increase since February, according to a CNN poll released Monday. His approval rating slid 6 percentage points since February, it found.

Only former President Bill Clinton fell under a 50 percent approval rate after his first six months, CNN said, since it began polling. Clinton’s approval rating hit 44 percent in 1993.

The survey also showed that support from Trump’s base is slipping.

His strong approval rating among Republicans has plummeted to 59 percent from 73 percent in February, the poll shows. Among his core supporters — whites without college degrees — only 35 percent approve, down 12 percentage points since February, CNN said.

Trump’s support as somebody who can bring change is flagging, as well.

The poll found 43 percent say he can “bring the kind of change the country needs” down from 48 percent in April, and 39 percent say he “can manage the government effectively” a drop from 44 percent in April.

As for trustworthiness, 73 percent said they are skeptical of the information that comes out of the White House and 30 percent said they believe “nothing at all,” the poll shows.

Another poll out Tuesday found Trump is also facing problems in his desire for a second term.

If the New Hampshire presidential primary were held today, Ohio Gov. John Kasich would get 52 percent of the support, compared to Trump’s 40 percent, an American Research Group poll shows.

About 8 percent were undecided.

Kasich, who ran against Trump in the 2016 presidential campaign, also fares well against Vice President Pence in a primary matchup in the Granite State.

He would defeat Pence by 41 percent to 27 percent, the poll found. Thirty-two percent were undecided.

The American Research Group poll surveyed 600 likely Republican presidential primary voters between Aug. 4-6 and has a plus or minus 4 percentage point margin of error.

The CNN poll, conducted by SSRS, sampled 1,018 adults between Aug. 3-6 and has a plus or minus 3.6 percentage point margin of error.