Social democratic Centrism

Social democratic Centrism is the political approach that mixes the values of Centrism and Social Democracy.
A logical definition of the term centrism is to assume that the two poles in question (e.g., Left/Right) are well-defined, and then (i) define as 'centrist' any position which the Left considers too far Right and the Right considers too far Left, and (ii) define as a 'Centrist' any person who self-identifies more with those positions than either the Left or the Right. The weakness in this argument is that it is difficult to unambiguously and objectively define both poles at once, but that difficulty affects all political definitions, not just centrists.
In practice, the two poles can only be well-defined in a specific place at a specific time, since they differ from place to place and change over time. Thus, "centrism" itself means different things in different places (depending on the local political spectrum) and changes over time. For example, ideas that were considered extremist 200 years ago (such as democracy and universal suffrage) are considered centrist today - while other ideas that were considered centrist 200 years ago (such as slavery and racism) are considered extremist today.
Furthermore Social Centrism is the centrist political approach with extensive social orientation that proposes to the society the political philosophy of Social Center, which constitutes “a total of attributes and values that offer in the state social cohesion, political prospect,improvement of terms of life and development of human culture, that should be shared between the entire population and not only between the privileged teams of the population.
 
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