
The largest voting bloc in America today has no party, no organization, and no spokesman. We want to change that.
The Hidden Majority
The major parties have become so polarized that they have left a gap in the middle--a gap of historic proportions. And in that gap is a group of voters larger than those supporting either party. If the members of this group voted the same way, they could win elections, or at least affect their outcomes. This majority is not represented by any political party. It is ignored in the polls and in the media. It is a majority without a voice. It is a Hidden Majority.
Are you in the Hidden Majority?
The Hidden Majority is made up of voters who decline to identify themselves with the hardliners on either end, even when they lean left or right. But that doesn't mean they are "undecideds" who don't hold strong values. On the contrary, they are independent thinkers who are unwilling to go along with what the major parties have become.
The major parties today.
Today's Republican and Democratic parties are defined almost entirely by their positions on controversial ideological issues. They are focused primarily on using the power of the government to impose their ideologies on our society, with or without our consent. Meanwhile, the basic responsibilities of government are neglected and the people are ignored.
What do most Americans want?
The polls show that most Americans are reasonable, even charitable people who want common sense, middle-ground approaches to our social and political problems. They want the government to take care of its basic responsibilities, not impose ideologies. And they are the majority.
Is there really a solution?
In their new book The Hidden Majority, Dale A. Berryhill and Kevin P. Henry show just how far the major parties have strayed from the views of the people they supposedly represent. Then they lay out a detailed strategic plan for unifying the Hidden Majority into an effective political force.
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