jere7my: (Graar!)
jere7my ([personal profile] jere7my) wrote2010-03-05 01:45 pm

The center is right of the center

On Wednesday, John McCain reiterated a meme he spread on the campaign trail:
Look, look, there is no doubt in my mind America's a right-of-center nation and this administration is governing from the left. [link]
I've been trying to wrap my mind around that, mathematically. It sounds to me like he's saying that the average American is to the right of the average American (which could get very awkward when trying to plan seating at dinner parties). The other option is the idea that there are fixed endpoints to the political spectrum, a Left point and a Right point, defining an axis that we can use to fix the mood of the electorate, which is equally ridiculous.

Politically useful, though.
marcmagus: Me playing cribbage in regency attire (Default)

[personal profile] marcmagus 2010-03-05 07:24 pm (UTC)(link)
It's possibly he's defining his spectrum based on international opinions, in which case his statement is at least meaningful, if of dubious accuracy. Or the average political leanings in "first world democratic" nations [the only ones which count].

Alternatively, he could be stating, with great accuracy, that the policy which actually gets enacted tends to the right of the median preference due to the oddities of the political process.
ext_22961: (Default)

[identity profile] jere7my.livejournal.com 2010-03-05 08:17 pm (UTC)(link)
I don't think John McCain would be caught dead listening to international opinions. I think his actual message is more like, "The Left has a disproportionately loud voice in this country, since they control Hollywood, New York, and Washington. But Real Americans are farther right than you'd think, if you went by the way the national discourse shapes up." Also ridiculous, but it's a politically useful way for a large, powerful minority to frame themselves as victims.