The GOP has seen more variation over that time period. About half viewed the Republicans as too extreme in 2015, but that number has receded in recent years, even as President Donald Trump has scored considerably worse on the same metric. Right now, both parties are about equally likely to be seen as “too extreme.” There’s also parity on how each party is seen by its own members: Just about a tenth of Americans on each side of the aisle are actively uncomfortable with the direction their co-partisans have taken. Like any single data point, this one deserves a few caveats. It’s just one question, and, by design, a subjective one: What people think constitutes “too extreme” will vary broadly. It also doesn’t touch on perceptions about where the parties stand ideologically or which issues they view as central, let alone make an argument for the electoral wisdom of any particular strategy. But it does offer some evidence against the existence of a groundswell of people newly concerned that the party has taken a radical turn. Meanwhile, the survey also finds that in a change from past polling, Republicans are now growing less likely to see their party as internally disjointed ― 61% of Republican and Republican-leaning registered voters say their party is mostly unified, while just 43% of Democrats and Democratic-leaning voters say the same of their party. Democratic and GOP voters are also about equally likely to express enthusiasm or satisfaction with their current elected officials, with GOP voters very slightly more bullish about the future of their party. Democrats, however, are generally content with the outlook heading in 2020: 77% of Democratic and Democratic-leaning voters say they’re at least satisfied with their presidential field, up from 68% who said the same in March.

Use the widget below to further explore the results of the HuffPost/YouGov survey, using the menu at the top to select survey questions and the buttons at the bottom to filter the data by subgroups: