
On the Media Do Moderates Win More Elections?
37 snips
Nov 5, 2025 Elliott Morris, a journalist and statistician behind the newsletter Strength in Numbers, dives into the electoral impacts of moderation in politics. He discusses the recent New York City mayoral win by Zohran Mamdani, emphasizing how divided party support reflects the broader debate on moderation. Morris critiques traditional analyses, arguing factors like incumbency and district dynamics are more pivotal than ideological centrist positions. He also highlights how group identity now supersedes policy preferences, reshaping electoral strategies for both parties.
AI Snips
Chapters
Books
Transcript
Episode notes
Moderation Isn't A Silver Bullet
- The claim that moderates outperform progressives is overstated and based on flawed baselines.
- Elliott Morris shows the moderation advantage is small and often explained by incumbency and fundraising.
Moderate Labels Mask Real Advantages
- Labeling candidates as moderate because of certain PAC support creates messy, biased groupings.
- Morris argues many apparent moderation benefits come from incumbency, fundraising, and district fit, not ideology.
Moderation Bonus Is Tiny
- The measurable moderation premium is about one to one-and-a-half percentage points.
- That margin is far smaller than factors like incumbency, fundraising, and candidate quality.



