Voters believe President Donald Trump is overreaching with his aggressive efforts to expand executive power, and they have deep doubts about some of the signature pieces of his agenda, a New York Times/Siena College poll found.

The turbulent early months of Trump’s administration are seen as “chaotic” and “scary” by majorities of voters — even many who approve of the job he is doing. Voters do not view him as understanding the problems in their daily lives and have soured on his leadership as he approaches his 100th day in office.

Trump’s approval rating sits at 42%. His standing is historically low for a president this early in a term, but it is in line with his stubborn unpopularity, which did not prevent him from sweeping the battleground states in last year’s election.

Now, however, voters express dimming confidence about Trump’s handling of some of the top issues that propelled him back to the White House, including the economy and immigration, even as most Americans support deportations. Only 43% said they approved of how he has managed the economy this term, a serious erosion on an issue long seen as a strength.

The president’s pursuit of widespread tariffs — which has caused stock-market drops and gyrations — was opposed by 55% of voters, including 63% of independents.

Taken together, the survey’s findings show that any second-term honeymoon for Trump is over. His approval rating among crucial independent voters is now at a woeful 29%.

Voters said he had “gone too far” on issue after issue — his tariffs, his immigration enforcement, his cuts to the federal workforce. Broad numbers of independent voters sided with Democrats in believing that he had overreached.