Polls: Voters in three key states Trump won 'embarrassed' by his conduct as president

Show Caption Hide Caption Trump's approval numbers drop in key states According to a new NBC News/Marist poll, President Trump’s job approval ratings have dropped in three key states--Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin.

WASHINGTON – President Trump is not only losing ground in three key states that helped send him to the White House, but a majority of voters there say he has embarrassed them, new polls say.

Six out of 10 voters in Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin say they feel embarrassed by Trump’s conduct as president, according to three new NBC News/Marist polls.

Pollsters asked voters whether Trump's conduct made them proud or embarrassed them. Sixty-four percent in Michigan and Wisconsin said they were embarrassed. Sixty-three percent in Pennsylvania said the same thing.

Trump’s approval rating in all three states has fallen below 40 percent.

Just 36 percent of Michigan voters approve of Trump’s job performance, while 55 percent disapprove.

In Pennsylvania, 35 percent give Trump high marks, while 54 percent disapprove.

Some 34 percent of Wisconsin voters approve of Trump’s performance, compared to 56 who disapprove.

More: Trump's assertion left wing protesters just as violent as white supremacists in Charlottesville sets off firestorm

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More: Here’s a look at how insanely close the election actually was in six key states

Trump won all three states in last November’s election, helping to propel him to an electoral college victory over Democrat Hillary Clinton.

Asked which party they would prefer to control Congress after the 2018 elections, voters in all three states gave Democrats the edge.

Forty-eight percent of Michigan voters preferred Democrats. In Pennsylvania, Democrats led with 47 percent. In Wisconsin, Democrats were favored with 46 percent.

The polls were conducted Aug. 13-17, after last weekend’s white supremacist rally and violence in Charlottesville, Va., and amid the fallout from Trump’s response to those events.

Trump on Saturday initially said "many sides" were to blame for the violence. On Monday, Trump directly condemned white supremacists, neo-Nazis and the KKK. By Tuesday, Trump doubled down on his initial statements, saying "both sides" were to blame and equating left wing groups with the white supremacists they came to protest.

An alleged white nationalist plowed his car into a crowd of protesters last Saturday, killing one woman and injured 19 others.