Vital Center

Vital Center

In United States politics, the Vital Center is a term used to describe where the Presidential nominees of the two major political parties go to look for votes, traditionally after they have wrapped up their own party's nomination at the party convention. This is based on the concept that the nominees have each secured the support of their own party's rank-and-file activists and now must go out in search of additional voters which, when added to the base, will result in sufficient support to win the election in November.

It has long been the case that neither U.S. major party could claim a large enough percentage of the electorate's loyalty to win a Presidential election with its own voters alone. Seldom will one party's nominee have enough appeal to members of the other party to make attracting sizable numbers of them a likely-winning strategy. It has long been the idea of both parties' operatives, therefore, to attract other voters — moderate or centrist voters — in order to have a winning number of electoral votes for their respective tickets. In order to do this, candidates generally feel compelled to modify positions taken in order to secure the support of enough of the base voters of their own party to secure its nomination in the first place. The term "Vital Center" can be said to have two meanings — "vital" in the sense of necessary or essential for winning, and "vital" in the sense of "living", for the attempt to capture it often seemingly breathes new life into ideas that have been figuratively carved into stone by partisan supporters.Fact|date=October 2007

The Vital Center will likely remain such as long as the majority of Americans do not strongly identify with all the major ideas of either major party, which increasingly seems to be the case. For example, most reliable polling data seems to indicate that a vast majority of Americans as a whole do not support amending the United States Constitution to make almost all abortions illegal. But the same polling also indicates that most Americans do not regard the right to abortion under almost any and all circumstances to be an inalienable right akin to free speech or freedom of religion. Likewise, most Americans believe in the right to own and possess firearms, but do not see that this right is somehow diminished or eliminated by some governmental regulations designed to keep automatic weapons, or weapons that can easily be converted into automatic weapons, out of the hands of private individuals. As long as the two major parties take positions which are out of touch with most Americans in order to please their most ardent advocates and supporters, they will find themselves scrambling for votes in the center in order to achieve a winning margin.

Etymology

The term The Vital Center was first coined by Harvard historian Arthur M. Schlesinger, in his 1949 book of that title. He himself objects to the domestic use of the phrase, though:

ee also

*Swing vote

References

* Schlesinger, Arthur M. "The vital center; the politics of freedom." Boston, Houghton Mifflin Co., 1949.


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Поможем написать курсовую

Look at other dictionaries:

  • vital center — index seat Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

  • The Vital Center — The Vital Center: The Politics of Freedom is a 1949 book, by Harvard historian Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., defending liberal democracy and a state regulated market economy against the totalitarianism of communism and fascism.Editions*cite book|title …   Wikipedia

  • center — Synonyms and related words: activator, adductor, amateur athlete, approach, archer, athlete, attractant, attrahent, average, axiom, axis, balance, ballplayer, baseballer, baseman, batter, battery, blocking back, bosom, bowman, catcher, center of… …   Moby Thesaurus

  • Vital Information — Información artística Género(s) Jazz, Jazz fusion. Período de actividad 1983 presente Web …   Wikipedia Español

  • center — n Center, middle, midst, core, hub, focus, nucleus, heart are comparable when meaning the point, spot, or portion of a thing which is comparable to a point around which a circle is described. Center approximates more or less closely its strict… …   New Dictionary of Synonyms

  • center — I (central position) noun axis, center of gravity, central point, convergence, converging point, core, epicenter, equidistance, eye, focal point, focus, focus of attention, fulcrum, half distance, halfway, media pars, medius, middle, middle… …   Law dictionary

  • Vital statistics — are the information maintained by a government, recording the birth and death of individuals within that government s jurisdiction. These data are used by public health programs to evaluate how effective their programs are. They are the… …   Wikipedia

  • Vital Borkelmans — Pas d image ? Cliquez ici. Biographie Nationalité …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Center for Social and Economic Research — (CASE) is a private, independent, non commercial research institution founded on the idea that research based policy making is vital for the economic welfare of societies. CASE was established in September 1991 by a group of prominent Polish… …   Wikipedia

  • vital element — index center (essence) Burton s Legal Thesaurus. William C. Burton. 2006 …   Law dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”