Bill Glasheen wrote:
I have posted this before; I will post it again. Attached is a version of the Nolan Chart which describes political views on a 2-dimensional spectrum. Those dimensions are...
- Personal liberty vs. personal security
...
- Economic liberty vs. economic security
A third dimension sometimes considered is technophobic vs. technophilic. I was going to post a chart which added in that third dimension, but alas my Norton software is now blocking it because it has a virus. Damn... too bad. It was a really good one, with faces we all know posted in the various places in the 3-dimensional spectrum.
I believe this is the one you are talking about Bill

The first Nolan Chart was developed in 1969 to reflect the Libertarian view, and I agree with you that we should look beyond the typical one-dimensional liberal-conservative spectrum we are use to. But the plain fact of the matter is that in our essentially two-party system the focus will always be on that one dimension. Democrat and Republican campaign strategists will always be more concerned with the Herron Ideological Position Chart over the Nolan chart.
Herron chart:

Why, well the Nolan chart muddies the waters in a two-party system, and campaign strategists in the big two are only interested in the simplest strategy that will get them the most votes (according to a campaign strategest who visited my political behavior class in the spring). So they push the liberal-vs-conservative dichotomy to the exclusion of any other factors.
Here is a series of Herron Charts that differentiate "Red States", "Blue States", and "Battleground (Swing) States"

These charts also demonstrate both why neither party can afford to ignore the moderate vote and why the swing states are so important (My advisor quipped the other day that he sure is glad the campaigning for "President of Ohio" is over!).
Personally I could care less about the success or failure of any party, I have no skin in the party game. I agree with the Founding Fathers in their opposition to party factions, and I think with the current political climate we see how right they were. I always have been registered as an independent and I always will be, and only care about individual candidates. But if we have to have parties then I favor the European model with three or more strong parties and leaders having to build coalitions to govern. That is the reason we have the Electoral College system for the presidential election afterall, it was developed to force presidential candidates to build geographical coalitions to get elected and not just be able to win by dominating one highly populated place. However the Electoral College system was developed in the absense of parties and unfortunately with just two strong parties the campaigns boil down to just a few key swing states being important.
So Bill, I am all for it if you can break this two-party, liberal-conservative-dimension stranglehold on U.S. politics! I am encouraged by the fact that more people are registering as independent and fewer with a party than ever before:
Gallup wrote:
Gallup records from 1951-1988 -- based on face-to-face interviewing -- indicate that the percentage of independents was generally in the low 30% range during those years, suggesting that the proportion of independents in 2011 was the largest in at least 60 years.
Unlike the dips in independent registration during presidential election years shown on the chart, surveys indicate a continuation of the growth of registered independents this year as well.
Yet another indicator of why neither party can ignore the moderates (sorry Jason).