Moderation In Congress: (Surprisingly) Not Dead Yet

The Article: Congressional Moderation: Dwindling, Not Dead by Adam Sorensen in Time.

The Text: Dick Lugar’s Tuesday primary loss in Indiana has inspired a predictably large amount of introspection about polarization in Congress. It marked a dark trend, but did it augur the death of all moderation? No. There are certain political realities that still exist for Republicans running in Blue states and Democrats in Red territory.

ā€œIndependent,ā€ ā€œbeholden to no oneā€ and ā€œworking togetherā€ are words that appear in this ad; ā€œRepublicanā€ is a word that does not. It’s not just talk either. A Congressional Quarterly analysis found Brown voted with his party in opposition to Democrats just 54% of the time in 2011, the second-lowest score in Mitch McConnell’s caucus. If a Republican wants to win re-election in Massachusetts, that’s just the way it’s going to be.

That being said, things aren’t static and Brown doesn’t cancel out Lugar. Nate Silver runs down the full list of falling bodies, but it’s hard to paint a clearer picture than this graph of Howard Rosenthal and Keith Poole’s data on congressional polarization over time:

Congress Polarization Graph

So let’s call moderation dwindling, not dead.

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