The Myth of Centrism

The Myth of Centrism

From Diabolical Lies by Katie Gatti Tassin & Caro Claire Burke

February 22, 2026 · 26 min

About this episode

This episode investigates the myth of centrism in American politics and questions the validity of conventional wisdom regarding political polarization and moderation.

This is a free preview of a paid episode. To hear more, visit www.diabolicalliespod.com If you pay attention to political commentary, you’ll often hear a few pieces of conventional wisdom: — America is “too polarized” — “Both sides” are “too extreme” — Or, most innocuously, that politicians should simply do that which is “popular,” which is itself code for policies that are considered “moderate” But do voters really punish candidates for being extreme? Are most “popular” ideas the “moderate” ones? And, moderate or not, does popularity necessarily indicate merit? The supposed antidote to this handwringing about political polarization is, more often than not, the mythical “centrist” candidate who will appeal to the even-more-mythical “ordinary American.” Centrism is, as the name implies, an ideology that lacks an ideology. Today, Diabolical Lies investigates the myth of centrism. [Full references and citations can be found in the show notes at www.diabolicalliespod.com.]

People in this episode

Hosts: Katie Gatti Tassin, Caro Claire Burke

Topics covered

  • political commentary
  • polarization
  • centrism
  • political ideology
  • voter behavior

Keywords

  • centrism
  • political polarization
  • voter behavior
  • moderate policies
  • political commentary

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Diabolical Lies, www.diabolicalliespod.com

Books & works: The Myth of Centrism

Places: America

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