A new poll shows the tea party is nearing an all-time low as conservative activists fight against the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, the Huffington Post reported.

The poll, conducted by Gallup, says 22 percent of participants identify as tea party supporters while 27 percent say they oppose the group, and the leftover 51 percent didn't express an opinion.

Additionally, participants who said they "strongly oppose" the party outnumber those who "strongly support" it, 17 percent to 11 percent. 

During the 2010 midterm election, a poll said 32 percent supported the fiercely anti-Obamacare group, demonstrating a 10 percent loss in the pass three years. 

On the other hand, only 55 percent of tea partyers approve of the Republican party while 43 percent disapprove.

Gallup surveyed a group of 1,510 adults between Sept. 5 and Sept. 8.

Although the party is generally considered a movement within the Republican party, 7 percent of GOP lawmakers view them unfavorably and 55 percent of them remain ambivalent on the group. 

Lydia Saad, senior editor of Gallup, commented on the poll numbers.

"U.S. support for the Tea Party is at a low ebb at a time when key issues of concern for the movement -- funding for the Affordable Care Act and raising the U.S. debt ceiling -- are focal points in Washington, with Tea Party-backed Sen. Ted Cruz prominently fighting both policies," Saad wrote. "The discomfort he has created in the Republican caucus is merely emblematic of the ambivalence national Republicans feel toward the movement. Although few Republicans outright oppose the Tea Party, far more are neutral toward it than support it."

In July, a poll done by Pew Research showed that Republicans believe the GOP needs to "address major problems" before the 2016 presidential election and 59 percent agreed to reconsider some of it's positions, with differing opinions on which way they should shift.