Most Americans don't live at the extremes. So why does it feel like the extremes run everything?Something is wrong in American politics, and most of us feel it - at the dinner table, in our feeds, in the voting booth where we end up voting against someone rather than for anyone. We've been told there are only two sides, and that we have to pick one. We don't. The American Center is a clear-eyed and genuinely hopeful argument that the reasonable majority - the people who believe in hard work and in helping their neighbors, in secure borders and in treating families with dignity, in personal responsibility and in a country where getting sick shouldn't bankrupt you - has been sidelined.
Not because it is outnumbered, but because it stays home. The extremes don't win because most Americans agree with them. They win because they show up: to the low-turnout primaries where our real choices are quietly made, months before November. This book names the three forces that broke our politics - a two-party system built to protect itself, a campaign-finance machine that answers to donors before voters, and a media ecosystem that profits from keeping us outraged and afraid of each other - and then does what most political books never do: it offers a practical way out.
Not a fantasy third party, but a plan to reclaim the two parties we already have, from the inside. In The American Center, you'll discover: Why primaries, not the general election, decide most races - and how the reasonable majority can take them back How candidates can fund a campaign without being bought, and a simple pledge any voter can hold them to Common-sense reform on the things that matter most - healthcare, education, and the dignity of work - grounded in what already works in other countries How to talk about politics across the divide without losing friends or family How to vote in the elections that count, run for local office, and fill the empty seats the extremes have quietly claimed Rooted in a simple moral idea - love your neighbor - and free of the culture war, this is a book for the politically homeless: too moderate for one party, too principled for the other.
For anyone exhausted by voting against things instead of for them. For everyone who suspects that the person across the aisle has far more in common with them than the people running both shows would ever admit. The center is not where politics goes to die. It is where democracy lives. It's time the rest of us showed up to claim it.
Most Americans don't live at the extremes. So why does it feel like the extremes run everything?Something is wrong in American politics, and most of us feel it - at the dinner table, in our feeds, in the voting booth where we end up voting against someone rather than for anyone. We've been told there are only two sides, and that we have to pick one. We don't. The American Center is a clear-eyed and genuinely hopeful argument that the reasonable majority - the people who believe in hard work and in helping their neighbors, in secure borders and in treating families with dignity, in personal responsibility and in a country where getting sick shouldn't bankrupt you - has been sidelined.
Not because it is outnumbered, but because it stays home. The extremes don't win because most Americans agree with them. They win because they show up: to the low-turnout primaries where our real choices are quietly made, months before November. This book names the three forces that broke our politics - a two-party system built to protect itself, a campaign-finance machine that answers to donors before voters, and a media ecosystem that profits from keeping us outraged and afraid of each other - and then does what most political books never do: it offers a practical way out.
Not a fantasy third party, but a plan to reclaim the two parties we already have, from the inside. In The American Center, you'll discover: Why primaries, not the general election, decide most races - and how the reasonable majority can take them back How candidates can fund a campaign without being bought, and a simple pledge any voter can hold them to Common-sense reform on the things that matter most - healthcare, education, and the dignity of work - grounded in what already works in other countries How to talk about politics across the divide without losing friends or family How to vote in the elections that count, run for local office, and fill the empty seats the extremes have quietly claimed Rooted in a simple moral idea - love your neighbor - and free of the culture war, this is a book for the politically homeless: too moderate for one party, too principled for the other.
For anyone exhausted by voting against things instead of for them. For everyone who suspects that the person across the aisle has far more in common with them than the people running both shows would ever admit. The center is not where politics goes to die. It is where democracy lives. It's time the rest of us showed up to claim it.