SVD axes capture agreement structure — centrists 'moving left' means voting patterns diverged from right-wing, not that parties changed ideology. 'Acceptance without conversion' is a behavioral claim. Documented as best-practice learning.main
parent
eada678c0c
commit
cea1468f15
@ -0,0 +1,42 @@ |
|||||||
|
--- |
||||||
|
module: analysis |
||||||
|
problem_type: best_practice |
||||||
|
date: 2026-05-25 |
||||||
|
tags: |
||||||
|
- svd |
||||||
|
- overton-window |
||||||
|
- voting-patterns |
||||||
|
- policy-content |
||||||
|
- spatial-analysis |
||||||
|
category: best-practices |
||||||
|
--- |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
# SVD Positions Reflect Voting Patterns, Not Policy Content |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Context |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
When analyzing political shifts with SVD/PCA party positions, it is tempting to interpret spatial movement as ideological change — "centrists moved left" sounds like centrist parties became more progressive. This interpretation is incorrect and dangerously misleading. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Guidance |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**SVD axes capture agreement structure, not policy positions.** A party's coordinate on an SVD axis reflects whom it votes with and against, not what policies it advocates. This was already documented in `svd-labels-voting-patterns-not-semantics.md` for axis labeling, but the same principle applies to spatial drift analysis. |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**What SVD movement actually means:** |
||||||
|
- Centrists moving left on an axis means centrist voting patterns became *more distinct* from right-wing voting patterns |
||||||
|
- It does NOT mean centrist parties adopted more left-wing policy positions |
||||||
|
- It does NOT mean the motions being voted on became more left-wing or right-wing in content |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
**Why this matters for Overton window analysis:** |
||||||
|
- "Acceptance without conversion" (centrists vote more with right-wing while spatially diverging) is a claim about *voting behavior*, not stated ideology |
||||||
|
- A right-wing motion can have high centrist support while still being in a "right-wing" cluster if centrist parties split on it |
||||||
|
- Topics with cross-partisan agreement (defense, nuclear energy) show minimal spatial separation regardless of how radical the motion text is |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## When to Apply |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
- Before interpreting any SVD/PCA spatial drift as "ideological shift" |
||||||
|
- When presenting SVD movement findings to non-technical audiences |
||||||
|
- When cross-referencing voting-pattern results with content-based analysis (LLM extremity scores, mechanism classification) |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
## Prevention |
||||||
|
|
||||||
|
Always pair SVD drift findings with a caveat: "SVD positions reflect voting patterns, not policy content. We measure behavioral shifts in voting coalitions, not ideological repositioning of party platforms." |
||||||
Loading…
Reference in new issue