Voters are demanding a general election now as Rishi Sunak’s government drowns in sleaze.
More than half want to head to the ballot box to have a say on who runs the country.
The survey, conducted for the Mirror by Redfield and Wilton, shows around four in 10 (41%) believe the PM does not have a mandate to govern. Only 31% disagree.
Mr Sunak was handed the keys of No10 in October without a single vote being cast by Tory MPs, party members or the public.
He has binned the Conservatives’ 2019 election manifesto as well as the pledges he made in the leadership contest in the summer.
Asked which party they associate with sleaze, 38% said Tories compared to only 9% who picked Labour. Around a fifth (19%) said both parties, while 11% chose neither.
The Prime Minister, who marked 100 days in office today promised to lead a government with “integrity, professionalism and accountability” at every level.
But he has faced a series of sleaze scandals.
Gavin Williamson resigned from Cabinet after just two weeks after he faced bullying claims.
Deputy PM Dominic Raab is currently being investigated over complaints he bullied dozens of civil servants.
Mr Sunak was criticised for appointing Suella Braverman as Home Secretary just six days after she was sacked from the job for leaking.
The PM last month was fined by the police for failing to wear a seat belt as he filmed an Instagram video in the back of the car.
And Conservative Party chairman Nadhim Zahawi was sacked last weekend for attempting to hide the truth about not paying enough in tax.
Critics have warned that the country is broken after 13 years of Tory rule.
The NHS is suffering its worst crisis in history as patients face record waiting lists and there are delays in ambulances getting to the seriously ill.
Mr Sunak has been criticised for failing to negotiate an end to the strikes across the public sector, including the health service, schools and railways.
In the poll yesterday, asked whether Parliament should call a general election now, a whopping 52% said yes with 32% opposed.
Mr Sunak was beaten by Liz Truss in the race to become Tory leader in the summer.
She was forced to stand down after just 49 days when her catastrophic mini-Budget caused economic carnage.
Mr Sunak was crowned as her replacement after Boris Johnson and Penny Mordaunt withdrew from the contest to succeed her.
He won by default without receiving a single vote or uttering a single word in public.
During the contest, his only public statements were a 166-word written message launching his campaign and a 66-word tweet after Mr Johnson withdrew.
More than 149,000 people have now signed the Mirror's petition on the 38 Degrees website calling for a general election now.
:: Redfield and Wilton interviewed 1,500 adults in Britain online on February 2.