Netanyahu Gives an Option to Terrorists Still Holding Hostages in Gaza
Did You Catch Kamala's Awkward Pause When Bret Baier Asked This Question?
Look Away, Democrats. Obama Has Some Unfiltered Observations About Kamala.
The NY Times Plagiarism Expert Steals Its Thunder, and Public Trust in the...
Anti-Gunners Overstating Research on Mandatory Storage Laws
How Black Voters View Trump
Trump to Headline Catholic Dinner While Kamala Will Send In Pre-Recorded Tape
View Co-Host Accuses Fox News of 'Racism, Sexism' After Kamala Interview
This Is How Many Million Illegal Aliens Would Be Imported Into the U.S....
Here's What Cardinal Dolan Has to Say About Kamala Harris Skipping Out on...
One Country Just Made It Illegal to Seek Surrogacy Abroad
Liberal Poll Shows Republican Bernie Moreno Ahead in 'Toss-Up' Ohio Senate Race
These Media Headlines on Harris' Fox News Interview May Reveal a Larger Pattern
'There Is Something Pathological Going on Here': JD Vance Reacts to Harris' Fox...
Investigative Task Force Commissioned by Mayorkas Urges Overhaul of Secret Service Leaders...
Tipsheet

So Close, So Far Away

A Gallup/USA Today poll indicates that Americans feel that Romney, Huntsman and Paul(!!!) are the closest to them politically; President Obama is the farthest away
Advertisement
.  Note that the second farthest away is Michele Bachmann.

There's a message that the poll is trying to send.  It's that Americans feel most comfortable identifying themselves with those who have been most often described by the press as "moderates" (like Huntsman and Romney), who come across in a relatively non-confrontational way and largely avoid vilifying their opponents or indulging in "extreme" rhetoric (unlike Obama and Bachmann).   (Paul's support shows there is a significant and vocal "strange bedfellows" contingent of lefties who want to withdraw from the world and libertarians who want a much smaller federal government).

The first point worth making about the poll is that -- however much true believers on the left and right would like to think that the electorate is "secretly" with them -- most Americans seem to see themselves as right-leaning moderates, for better or worse.
Advertisement
What's  more, it suggests that voters are less likely to gravitate toward the general-election candidate whose rhetoric projects a threatening "extremism" (in moderate eyes) in his/her views.  

Optimally, we would have a candidate like Ronald Reagan -- a man with the capacity to communicate a strong conservative message in a way that invites agreement, not alienation.  But every election doesn't have a Reagan, and it's not always a betrayal of principle to embrace a person with views that regular Americans profess to embrace, especially when there's a solid argument that he may well be more solid than rock-ribbed conservatives believe.


Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement