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Peter Walcott's avatar

Americans have been promised a great deal at relatively little cost to them which is why the U.S. debt is approaching $37 trillion ($107,000+ per citizen). I get John Halpin's point, that neither major party represents the "middle" very well, yet until we citizens are willing to actually bear the cost (financial and emotional) of the things we want, including those in the list above, we will not have a party that is truly representative of the 80% in the middle.

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Richard's avatar

A party in the middle would have to come from the Establishment wing of the two existing parties plus the disengaged. In other words, a party of failure. Economic, cultural and political failure. The core of the issue suite is price controls, a policy that has failed every single time since it was invented by Hammarubi.

Better to redefine politics so as to unite the two non-Establishment wings

In other words, populist fusion. That couldn't get to 80 % but neither could a center party. Just look at how well they are doing in Europe. Populist fusion is hard but it wouldn't have the stench of failure and kicking the can down the road.

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