By: Rebecca Witherspoon
Liberals trust government to solve problems. Conservatives fear it will abuse power. And then there’s the often-overlooked middle: the centrists.
Centrists are the folks who want balanced budgets and civil liberties. They’re socially liberal, fiscally conservative, and above all—pragmatic. They want government to work efficiently, stay out of their personal lives, and simply do the job it was elected to do.
The problem? When things seem “okay,” many centrists don’t vote. They go about their lives, assuming someone else is watching the store. But when government spins out of control—when spending explodes, freedoms erode, or partisanship runs wild—they wake up. The result? Inconsistent voter turnout, and inconsistent accountability.
Meanwhile, the extremes show up every time. They dominate the conversation, push polarizing policies, and steer the ship toward division.
If we want better leadership, less dysfunction, and more unity, the middle needs to engage—not just when the house is on fire, but consistently. Civic responsibility isn’t just for the loudest voices. It’s for the reasonable ones too.
The future of our country doesn’t belong to the left or the right. It belongs to the millions in the middle—if they choose to show up.

Outstanding post!!
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