President Donald Trump has "embarrassed" more than six in 10 voters in three key states that helped propel him into the White House, according to three new NBC-Marist state polls.

The polls, conducted between Aug. 13 and Aug. 17, asked voters in Michigan, Wisconsin and Pennsylvania whether they approved or disapproved of the president's job performance since his inauguration, and whether they were proud of or embarrassed by his conduct.

Nearly two-thirds of voters in Pennsylvania (63 percent), Wisconsin and Michigan (64 percent each) said that Trump's actions have embarrassed them. Further, his approval rating in all three states ranged between 34 and 36 percent.

And, while all three states gave the president higher marks on the economy, six in 10 voters also said that the U.S.'s role internationally has been weakened under Trump.

The polls were conducted after the Charlottesville unrest on Aug. 12 and amid the President's changes in response to the white nationalist rally that turned violent, killing one.

During the 2016 presidential election, Trump won all three states by a combined 80,000 votes, a feat no Republican presidential candidate has achieved since the 1980s.

The polls also hinted that voters in the three key states would prefer a Democratic-led Congress ahead of the 2018 midterm elections, with double-digit preferences in Michigan and Pennsylvania and an 8-point lead in Wisconsin.