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July 27, 2004

A Little Further to the Right… A Little Further… A Little Bit More…. Good! You’re Perfect!

panelDems
panelRepubs

The chart above, from an Op-Ed piece in yesterday’s New York Times (here), shows where our presidential and vice-presidential candidates stand on the ideological continuum from liberal to conservative.

Recently, on the Daily Show, Jon Stewart looked at how the media creates “conventional wisdom.” Generally, it seems, the strategy is to repeat certain sentences over and over and over again, such as “Kerry and Edwards are the first and fourth most liberal members in the United States Senate.” As Stewart observes, “Talking points: they’re true…because they’re said a lot.”

The chart would seem to indicate that Kerry and Edwards aren’t quite as liberal as one might think (Edwards showing up pretty close to Lieberman, who’s about as liberal as Zell Miller). What’s even more interesting, though, is where Bush and Cheney show up on the “conservative” side of the spectrum. Both of them are far to the right of the “Senate median,” and Cheney is as far to the right, if not farther, as Ted Kennedy is to the left.

The questions I find myself asking, then, are, how did it get to be such a dirty term to be considered a liberal, but being a conservative leaves one completely unchallenged? And why is it bad to be far from the mainstream on the left, but just fine to be as far if not farther from the mainstream on the right?

(>>From our Guest Blogger: Karen, here.)

(graphic: Paul Sahre for the New York Times)

  • Frank Hodal

    Yeah, “talking points,” as if. There was a recent Letter to the Editor in the Chicago Tribune that asked, if Kerry is always flip-flopping how can he be the most consistent liberal? Not something the GOP is asking itself. On the same note, I heard a Republican pundit/attack dog proclaim in the same soundbite that the country was divided at 50/50 BUT Kerry was out of touch with mainstream America. I’m still puzzling over that piece of ‘information.’

  • Dean

    The other question is in the world schema of things… is the ’senate medium’ actually in the centre?
    It seems to me that the centre of the US is further to the right than people realise. From the perspective of the international community it would be hard to discern the difference between corporate fascism and the Democrats let alone the Republicans.