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Are the Democratic and Republican parties captives of their extremes?

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(MCT) — CHARLOTTE, N.C. — America’s two major political parties are prisoners of their images, stifling their ability to broaden their appeal.

Democrats are routinely portrayed as liberals and Republicans as conservatives, and movement toward the center, where elections are usually won, is difficult to detect.

The image problem dogs both parties. Each met last week for the first time since the November elections, and each pledged to work hard to welcome others. But each confronts a challenge.

Being firmly left or right does play well in a lot of places, particularly on the day’s most prominent issues, such as immigration, gun control and debt reduction. Being left or right is also important to party activists, the folks who raise and contribute money and provide crucial volunteer manpower. But as appealing as lines in the sand are to the faithful, they make it hard to sell the parties to everyone else.

That’s why, despite senators from both parties trumpeting a plan Monday to revamp immigration laws, prospects for passage in the Republican-led House of Representatives remain shaky. It’s why the chances of Congress enacting new measures to dramatically curb the sale and use of guns are uncertain at best.

The ideological polarization makes expanding the parties difficult, and the more that leaders seem to appeal to those bases, the harder it gets to broaden the parties’ appeal.

The Democratic Party “is suffering from perceptions about Obama,” Kansas Democratic Chairman Joan Wagnon said. “It’s about fear-mongering, and it’s about this notion that people are losing control over their lives to Washington.”

In such states, voters tend to see President Barack Obama as the champion of big, obtrusive government, a talking point that conservatives will be highlighting as major elements of the 2010 health care law, which requires nearly everyone to get coverage next year or pay a fine, kick in.

Republicans have the bigger challenge. A CNN/ORC International poll last month found that 53 percent thought the party was too extreme, compared with 37 percent — still a sizable amount — who saw Democrats that way. The conservative hard line on immigration and guns doesn’t help in more moderate states.

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