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Your Political Philosophy
The below is a way of thinking about your political philosophy by dividing your VoteMatch answers into "personal" and "economic" questions.  It is only a theory - please take it with a grain of salt!

Personal Questions:  Liberals and libertarians agree in choosing the less-government answers, while conservatives and authoritarians agree in choosing the more-restrictions answers.

Economic Questions:  Conservatives and libertarians agree in choosing the less-government answers, while liberals and authoritarians agree in choosing the more-restrictions answers.
 

Your Score

You scored the following on the VoteMatch questions:
 

Personal Score 23%
Economic Score 80%
 

Where You Fit In

Where your Personal score meets your Economic score on the grid below is your political philosophy.  Based on the above score, you are a Hard-Core Conservative.

Political Map

 
Personal Score

This measures how much you believe government should intervene in people's personal lives. Personal issues include health, love, recreation, prayer and other activities that are not measured in dollars.

  • A high score (above 60%) means you believe in tolerance for different people and lifestyles.
  • A low score (below 40%) means you believe that your standards of morality & safety should be enforced by government. 

Economic Score

This measures how much you believe government should intervene in people's economic lives. Economic issues include retirement funding, budget allocations, and taxes. 

  • A high score (above 60%) means you believe in personal responsibility for your financial matters, and that free-market competition is better for people than central planning by the government. 
  • A low score (below 40%) means you believe that a good society is best achieved by the government redistributing wealth. You believe that government's purpose is to decide which programs are good for society, and how much should be spent on each program.
Examples

The chart below indicates how four "hard-core" political philosophers would answer the questions. From this example, you can see how you fit in with each philosophy.  Your answers are on the left.

  • A "hard-core liberal" would answer personal questions to minimize government involvement, but would answer economic questions to include government intervention.
  • A "hard-core libertarian" would answer both personal and economic questions to minimize government involvement.
  • A "hard-core conservative" would answer personal questions to include government intervention, but would answer economic questions to minimize government involvement.
  • A "hard-core authoritarian" would answer both personal and economic questions with proposals that include government intervention.

 

= Strongly Support    = Support    = No Opinion    = Oppose    = Strongly Oppose
 

Personal Issues You Hard-core Liberal Hard-core Libertarian Hard-Core Conservative Hard-Core Authoritarian
Question 1. Abortion is a woman's unrestricted right
 
Question 3. Comfortable with same-sex marriage
 
Question 8. EPA regulations are too restrictive
 
Question 12. Pathway to citizenship for illegal aliens
 
Question 17. Avoid foreign entanglements
 
Question 4. Keep God in the public sphere
 
Question 9. Stricter punishment reduces crime
 
Question 15. Expand the military
 
Question 16. Make voter registration easier
 
Question 19. Marijuana is a gateway drug
 

= Strongly Support    = Support    = No Opinion    = Oppose    = Strongly Oppose

Economic Issues You Hard-core Liberal Hard-core Libertarian Hard-Core Conservative Hard-Core Authoritarian
Question 2. Legally require hiring women & minorities
 
Question 5. Expand ObamaCare
 
Question 11. Higher taxes on the wealthy
 
Question 18. Prioritize green energy
 
Question 20. Stimulus better than market-led recovery
 
Question 6. Privatize Social Security
 
Question 7. Vouchers for school choice
 
Question 10. Absolute right to gun ownership
 
Question 13. Support and expand Free Trade
 
Question 14. Support American Exceptionalism
 
You Hard-core Liberal Hard-core Libertarian Hard-Core Conservative Hard-Core Authoritarian

= Strongly Support    = Support    = No Opinion    = Oppose    = Strongly Oppose

 

Final Notes

To ensure balance among political viewpoints, we arranged the wording of the questions so that half the time, the answer involving more government is answered by "support", and half the time by "oppose." Hence, each of the "hard core" philosophers would choose "support" for 3 or 4 of the Personal questions and for 3 or 4 of the Economic questions.

There are four questions which are not counted in your political philosophy. Those questions do not fit this theory -- for example, Democrats typically oppose unrestricted gun ownership, while a 'hard core liberal' would support it on grounds of the government not intervening in a personal issue. These omissions ensure that the theoretical definitions match with current-day politics.

Many of these statements cross over the line between personal issues and economic issues. And many people might answer what we call a "Personal" issue based on economic reasoning. But we have tried to arrange a series of questions which separates the way you think about government activities in these two broad scales.

Political Map and some content from Advocates for Self-Government.

 

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