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    1. Really interesting typology and results. I feel like the progressive left and no-excuse right get all the headlines, but this shows that the majority of people are much less polarized.

    2. The typology is fascinating, you can see the full details of the breakdown here: https://www.pewresearch.org/politics/2026/06/10/beyond-red-vs-blue-the-political-typology/

      Upshot is something that has found me in regular conflict with people on Reddit. Most people in the US really are not up for progressive policies. They’re not some sort of hidden voting group that the DNC is silencing.

      > Americans in the other five groups are more mixed in their political values – and in some cases, much less attentive to politics. Together, these five groups make up a majority of the public.

      As someone with a strong political ideology, I just cannot grok these people. Like, do you not think about your values and how they apply? These are the groups that often frustrate me as likely these people are the ones who dictate election and don’t seem to make choices based on any consistent values.

    3. One takeaway from this is that Trump’s core support comes from a smaller base than most people imagine. Although he’s effectively managed to capture the Republican party it’s not difficult to see a mass defection of polite conservatives and centrist.

    4. I want to say I’m apart of the left-out left, but I don’t find too many people with the same political ideology as myself except from some close Catholic friends, and it having a 12% share in this I feel like I would find a lot more. Maybe I’m more inline with tuned out middle, minus the tuned out portion ha.

    5. SweetBasil_ on

      The category names are too bizarre. You can’t be a pragmatic centrist, you have to be « tuned out middle » ?? That’s kind of judgey

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