About 63% of all American voters believe that the Supreme Court's decision-making is primarily driven by politics, according to a new survey released by Quinnipiac University.
The survey also revealed that just 32% believe that the court is mostly motivated by law, while as many as seven in ten Americans feel that the court's justices should be given term limits.
The survey was published just days after a Yahoo News/YouGov poll found that 74% of Americans believe the Supreme Court has become "too politicized."
Jamison Foser, a progressive strategist and adviser to Take Back the Court, told The Washington Post that the Quinnipiac survey reflects "a growing recognition of the need to rebalance the Supreme Court and disempower the court's right-wing majority."
"Without doing so, everything from abortion and voting rights to environmental protections is likely to be struck down," Foser added.
RELATED: The Supreme Court guards its privacy. Too bad it doesn't care about yours and mine
The survey comes amid a public uproar around what many critics on the left have derided as an array of partisan Supreme Court rulings in recent months.
Want a daily wrap-up of all the news and commentary Salon has to offer? Subscribe to our morning newsletter, Crash Course.
Earlier this month, Politico reported that the court has already informally voted to overturn Roe v. Wade, the landmark ruling that established America's constitutional right to abortion. Critics have also expressed outrage over the court's rescission of President Biden's mask mandate for private sector workers, as well as its reversal of the Centers for Disease Control's eviction moratorium, first enacted in order to buoy millions Americans buckling under the financial consequences of the pandemic.
The court, for its part, has been adamantly opposed to the notion that it's motivated by politics.
Back in September, Justice Amy Coney Barrett insisted that the bench is "not comprised of a bunch of partisan hacks."
"The media, along with hot takes on Twitter, report the results and decisions," Barrett later said. "That makes the decision seem results-oriented. It leaves the reader to judge whether the court was right or wrong, based on whether she liked the results of the decision."
RELATED: Supreme Court hearing grows tense as Justice Kagan grills lawyer challenging Biden's vaccine mandate
That same month, Justice Clarence Thomas echoed a similar sentiment, accusing the media of making "it sound as though you are just always going right to your personal preference."
"They think you become like a politician," Clarence told a crowd at Notre Dame University. "That's a problem. You're going to jeopardize any faith in the legal institutions."
Thomas has been plagued by accusations of bias over the activities of his wife, Ginni Thomas, a right-wing activist who reportedly played an instrumental role in a failed scheme to reinstall Donald Trump as president in the 2020 election.