Americans are largely divided along partisan lines on President Trump's policies as he approaches his 100th day in office, according to a new poll.

A new Politico-Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health poll finds the general public is opposed to many of the president's plans, such as building a wall along the country's southern border and dismantling ObamaCare.

But Republicans want the president to keep up his campaign promises.

According to the poll, 60 percent of the general public said after the GOP healthcare bill was pulled from the House floor that they'd prefer the president and Republicans work with Democrats to fix ObamaCare or move on.

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But about the same amount of Republicans said Congress should continue its efforts to repeal the former president's signature healthcare legislation completely or try again to repeal and replace.

The poll also finds 36 percent of registered voters say the effort to repeal and replace ObamaCare makes them more likely to vote for a Democrat in 2018. Another 24 percent say it makes them more likely to vote for a Republican.

Only one-third of adults support building a wall along the country's southern border, one of the president's main campaign promises. But 72 percent of Republicans are in favor of constructing the wall.

Nearly all of those who support building the wall say it should be constructed, even if Trump does not get Mexico to pay for it.

A majority of adults also oppose the part of the president's immigration order that puts a temporary ban on refugees entering the country. But among Republicans, 76 percent support the ban.

Sixty percent of the public is also against the president's proposed cuts to the budget of the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA). On the contrary, more than two-thirds of Republicans support the EPA cuts.

The poll was conducted by SSRS, an independent research company, from March 22 to 26. Another survey was conducted from March 29 to April 2. The first was conducted among 1,019 adults and the second among 1,017 adults. The margin of error for the first poll is 3.7 percentage points and 3.8 points for the second poll.