A survey from Chegg/College Pulse showed that on April 14, some 60 percent of those asked expected to see Trump victorious in November.

This majority has flipped by July 14, with 60 percent predicting he would not be reelected.

The polling is conducted on a weekly basis among more than 1,500 students attending colleges or universities across the U.S.

Terren Klein, CEO and co-founder of College Pulse, suggested the president’s handling of protests across the country might have impacted students’ views.

“In early June, we saw a dramatic shift in college students’ predictions about who would win the election,” he told Newsweek.

Until that point, Trump had held at around 60 percent, with Klein suggesting his response to the protests following George Floyd’s killing might have swayed students’ opinions.

“By now, the percentages have completely reversed,” Klein said.

This theory would coincide with Trump having seen his disapproval ratings spike amid the protests.

Of those asked in the Chegg/College Pulse polling, 67 percent would back Democratic presidential candidate Joe Biden in the election, according to the latest released figures, up 10 points from 57 percent on April 14.

The data points are based on a weighted rolling average from the previous three weeks’ surveys.

Biden has consistently had more support than Trump among students, even though earlier on in polling respondents anticipated his defeat.

Newsweek has contacted the Trump and Biden campaigns for comment.

Prior to them leaving the race, students had been more in favor of Vermont Senator Bernie Sanders and Massachusetts Senator Elizabeth Warren over Biden.

Students polled previously predicted he would win the election, but are now anticipating his defeat.

On April 7, the polling suggested 71 percent of students wanted Sanders over 24 who wanted Biden.

There were questions as to whether their supporters would switch allegiance to Biden, despite his former opponents giving him their backing, with young democratic voters having been unconvinced the party would unite under his leadership.

However, polling earlier this month suggested that most of his rivals’ former backers will choose to back Biden. Of Sanders’ supporters asked, 87 percent asked said they would support Biden in November, while 96 percent of Warren’s said they would.

The New York Times/Siena College poll was conducted among 3,870 registered voters from June 8 to 18.

Biden has held a consistent lead over Trump in national polling in recent weeks, though younger voters are one area where his support is weaker.

Recent NBC News/Wall Street Journal polling found that Biden was ahead of Trump by 11 points, at 51 percent to 40 percent among 900 registered voters asked July 9 to 12.

But among those, only 26 percent of voters aged 18 to 34 had a positive view of Biden, while 44 percent had a negative view.

Despite this, those same respondents backed Biden over Trump by 62 percent to 23 percent, NBC reported.

Trump has also faced issues among young Republican voters, with Will Galloway, chairman of the South Carolina College Republicans, recently calling for people not to vote to reelect the president.

Galloway said he would “hope Republicans all over this country don’t vote for him in November,” in a video posted on the website of the group Republican Voters Against Trump.

However, the president retains support among some student groups, with a crowd of young voters greeting him in Arizona last month, following a disappointing turn out at his earlier rally in Tulsa.

Trump has dismissed surveys himself, criticizing “fake polls,” while Vice President Mike Pence recently said: “Polling is broken in America.”