It’s the land of the free and the home of the brave, but voters are not feeling so great about America on the eve of the presidential election.A majority of Americans – 62 percent – say they are less proud of America as a result of the 2016 presidential contest, while only seven percent say they are more proud of the country because of the race.

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But the history-making potential of both candidates has been overshadowed by the record-breaking unpopularity of the two nominees. Only 33 percent of voters view Trump positively, while 59 percent view him negatively. For Clinton, it’s 38 percent positive and 53 percent negative.The data are also particularly stark compared to 2008, when voters had a choice between the first black presidential nominee, Barack Obama, or a widely-respected war hero, John McCain. In the final NBC News/Wall Street Journal poll before the 2008 election, 34 percent of voters said they were more proud of their country because of the presidential race, 45 percent said their pride in the country had not changed, and just 12 percent said they were less proud of the United States because of the election.

In the latest poll, Clinton voters expressed more pessimism about their pride in the country than those voting for Trump. Almost three-quarters – 74 percent – of Clinton voters said they are less proud of America as a result of the election, compared to 49 percent of Trump voters who said the same. But both groups were about equally unlikely — just nine percent for Trump supporters and six percent for Clinton voters — to say they are now more proud of America.