A Quote by David Cross

I'm not a centrist, and there's nothing about me that's centrist. I never have been. — © David Cross
I'm not a centrist, and there's nothing about me that's centrist. I never have been.
You know we have Democratic centrists here to blame for the economic conditions driving this rightwing extremism. So the solution here, you know, is not Hillary Clinton and more of the Clintonism centrist, the centrist Clinton philosophy that is greeding this economic misery.
The media claimed to be non-partisan, centrist. It's not been that way for a lot of history.
I have been called many things in public life, but the cap that best fits is that of the centrist dad.
By temperament and disposition and emotions, I'm a liberal; but in my beliefs about what's best for the country, I'm a centrist.
I'm a centrist.
I am not a centrist.
I'm someone who believes in centrist governing philosophy.
My audience is much more center right, or centrist.
For most of my life, I've considered myself a political centrist.
I would consider myself more a passionate centrist.
Being a Christian is not a political orientation for the president, but he is a centrist.
I'm a pro-capitalist, middle-of-the-road, tepid centrist.
Hillary Clinton is a centrist Democrat who is more hawkish than President Obama and far more principled and knowledgeable about foreign affairs than Trump, who is too unstable and erratic to be entrusted with the nuclear triad he has never heard of.
I'm definitely a centrist and feel like both parties can be absurd.
Personally, many of my views are not in the mainstream as I am a centrist-libertarian.
I'm getting nervous to be called a centrist. Breaking out in a rash.
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