Julia Fair

USA TODAY

Americans might be ready for more than two political parties, according to a new Pew Research Center report.

The spectrum shows eight different political groups, from core conservatives to solid liberals. The report, based on surveys of more than 5,000 adults conducted throughout the summer, suggested the current fissures in the two current parties have led to the broad categories.

Pew sums up its findings:

Nearly a year after Donald Trump was elected president, the Republican coalition is deeply divided on such major issues as immigration, America's role in the world and the fundamental fairness of the U.S. economic system. The Democratic coalition is largely united in staunch opposition to President Trump. Yet, while Trump's election has triggered a wave of political activism within the party's sizable liberal bloc, the liberals' sky-high political energy is not nearly as evident among other segments in the Democratic base. And Democrats also are internally divided over U.S. global involvement, as well as some religious and social issues.

Those divisions were evident in six previous Pew Research Center typology studies. But the new report suggests the current divides within the GOP are around issues that have been a priority for Trump since he launched his presidential campaign.

Here are the eight groups:

1. Core Conservatives — 13%

2. Country First Conservatives — 6%

3. Market Skeptic Republicans — 12%

4. New Era Enterprisers — 11%

5. Devout and Diverse — 9%

6. Disaffected Democrats — 14%

7. Opportunity Democrats — 12%

8. Solid Liberals — 16%

You can see which new category you fit in by taking their quiz here.