The tally is in, and President Barack Obama is on most Republicans' naughty list this year, while GOP White House candidate Donald Trump is on the nice list.

Obama has an incredible 86 percent disapproval rating in a Morning Consult poll released today.

And 87 percent of the respondents said the country is on the wrong track.

The tally is in, and President Barack Obama is on most Republicans' naughty list this year, while GOP White House candidate Donald Trump is on the nice list. Obama has an incredible 86 percent disapproval rating in a Morning Consult poll released today

The poll also gave Donald Trump an unusually high boost to 70 percent in a general election scenario against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Clinton had 15 percent of voters' support

The Republican survey results do not square with broader surveys, in which the president has had, at most, a 54 percent disapproval rating, and a 51.9 percent unfavorable rating on average among all Americans.

Still, the poll highlights the malcontent with the president's leadership as the year comes to a close and Obama heads to Hawaii for an annual, 17-day vacation.

He leaves the White House early this evening and arrives in Hawaii overnight after a stop in San Bernardino, California, to meet with the families of victims in a terror-related attack earlier this month.

The poll also gave Donald Trump an unusually high boost to 70 percent in a general election scenario against former Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. Clinton had 15 percent of voters' support.

Trump's Republican primary election numbers were on par with other recent polls that have put him 20 points or more ahead of his competitors.

In the Morning Consult survey, 36 percent of GOP voters gave Trump the nod, while 12 percent said they were backing Ben Carson. Another 11 percent chose Ted Cruz. Marco Rubio had nine percent and seven percent chose Jeb Bush.

Everyone else included included in the poll had less than five percent backing them.

In terms of issues most-affecting Republican leaning voters, 38 percent put security at the top, followed by the economy at 29 percent.

Far down the list were health care at 10 percent and 'senior's issues' at 10 percent as well.