"Center-Right Nation" Watch - Hoover Institution Admits It's a Center-Left Nation

by: David Sirota

Sun Nov 16, 2008 at 16:15


The Hoover Institution is one of the major conservative think tanks in this country, so this op-ed in the Washington Post today is pretty incredible for its honesty:

Rich Lowry, the editor of National Review, in Outlook last week: The United States "is indeed, as conservatives have been insisting in recent days, a center-right country." On election night, former Bush guru Karl Rove opined on Fox News, "Barack Obama understands this is a center-right country, and he smartly and wisely ran a campaign that emphasized it." And it's not just conservative pundits and operatives singing this song. Take Newsweek editor Jon Meacham, who wrote an Oct. 27 cover essay entitled "America the Conservative," which argued that Obama will have to "govern a center-right nation" that "is more instinctively conservative than it is liberal."

The only problem: It isn't true. Or at least, not anymore.

Here's the stark reality: It is now harder for the Republican presidential candidate to get to 50.1 percent than for the Democrat. My Hoover Institution colleague David Brady and Douglas Rivers of the research firm YouGovPolimetrix have been analyzing data from online interviews with 12,000 people in both 2004 and 2008. It shows an overall shift to the Democrats of six percentage points. As they write in the forthcoming edition of Policy Review, "The decline of Republican strength occurs by having strong Republicans become weak Republicans, weak Republicans becoming independents, and independents leaning more Democratic or even becoming Democrats." This is a portrait of an electorate moving from center-right to center-left.

Read the whole admission here. It's dead-on.

David Sirota :: "Center-Right Nation" Watch - Hoover Institution Admits It's a Center-Left Nation

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Yellow is a center-right color. (0.00 / 0)
I thought this pasage from the editorial was interesting:

True, the percentage of voters describing themselves as "liberal" and "conservative" has held relatively constant over many election cycles, with self-described liberals checking in at 22 percent this time around (up one percentage point over 2004) and self-described conservatives at 34 percent (unchanged from 2004). The numbers may not have changed, but the views behind those labels certainly have. Nowadays, it's a fair bet that most of those calling themselves "liberal" support gay marriage. In 1980, those same liberals were, no doubt, cutting-edge supporters of gay rights, but the notion of same-sex marriage would have occurred only to the most avant-garde. In 1980, having a teenage daughter who was pregnant out of wedlock would have ruled you out for the No. 2 spot on the Democratic ticket. This year, it turned out to be a humanizing addition to the conservative vice presidential nominee's résumé.

But it sort of points to the incoherence of this whole "center-left/center-right" debate. Center-left or center-right relative to what? This passage implies that the metric is relative to the past: we are to the left of where we were 25 years ago. But then why not say we're a radically left-wing country, relative to where we were 200 years ago? Or if we're center-right, what, exactly, are we slightly to the right of? Some Platonic notion of mainstream centrist politics, outside of time and changing circumstances? That concept doesn't stand up to about two seconds' worth of consideration.



Bingo! (0.00 / 0)
what, exactly, are we slightly to the right of? Some Platonic notion of mainstream centrist politics, outside of time and changing circumstances? That concept doesn't stand up to about two seconds' worth of consideration.

Such narratives are like movie plots with so many holes they look like Swiss cheese.  You aren't supposed to think about them.  You're supposed to just swallow them whole.

Now, I got nothing against the Swiss.  But I like to chew my cheese, and really enjoy how it tastes.  And speaking of taste, make mine Havarti.

"You know what they say -- those of us who fail history... doomed to repeat it in summer school." -- Buffy The Vampire Slayer, Season 6, Episode 3


[ Parent ]
I prefer my cheese yellow (0.00 / 0)
...like colby or cheddar...

[ Parent ]
The Wall St. Journal (0.00 / 0)
WSJ equated Obama's election with the coming of socialism.  Some conservatives view anything to the left of Falwell as center-left.  

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