Three out of every five Americans views Donald Trump unfavourably, according to Gallup's most recent two-week average for all of the candidates. That's the highest among the Republicans and the highest of any candidate in the race at this point.
It's so high, in fact, that Gallup's Frank Newport wanted to see how it compared to the peak unfavourable ratings earned by every candidate back to 1992, when Gallup began tracking the data as it does now.
No candidate in the past 25 years has been viewed more unfavourably by Americans (Democrat, Republican and independent) than Donald Trump.
George H. W. Bush is the only one that really came close, with his unfavourable ratings spiking just before he lost his reelection in 1992. On the most-popular end of the spectrum are Bernie Sanders and Ben Carson -- both of whom are less well-known than Trump, meaning that fewer people have an opinion one way or the other.
Gallup also noted earlier this week that Ted Cruz's favourability among Republicans had plunged this month, perhaps due to the increased scrutiny he's been facing as the one-time Iowa front-runner. (Or, perhaps, for other reasons.)