I found separating the candidates' text according to the images to be too much trouble, so I posted both of them together.


Three candidates tie with an economic score of 15. The one with the highest social score of 85 and therefore the most liberal is Jay Inslee. That makes him appear more liberal than his Voteview score, but that's eight years out of date. Again, he's probably moved left since he went from Congress to the Washington statehouse. Two candidates tie with social scores of 80, Tim Ryan and Andrew Yang. This makes Yang the most liberal non-politician in the contest. Considering that his signature issue is Basic Guaranteed Income, that shouldn't be a surprise. On The Issues considers all three Hard-Core Liberals.
The two Texans in the contest tie with an economic score of 18. Of the two, Beto O'Rourke has the second highest social score with a score of 88, ranking him under only Sanders and Mike Gravel, while Julian Castro is closer to the center with a social score of 78. Despite the clear difference in social score, On The Issues rates both as Hard-Core Liberals.
Two U.S. Representatives, Seth Moulton and Eric Swalwell tie with economic scores of 20. Moulton is the more liberal socially with a score of 85, tying with Warren and Inslee, while Swalwell is more moderate with a social score of 75. Swalwell qualified for this month's debate, while Moulton was one of four candidates who missed the mark. On The Issues rates both as Hard-Core Liberals, despite Swalwell's social score being only five points away from Gillibrand and just two points away from Pete Butigieg (below). Gotta draw the line somewhere.
Excerpted from OnTheIssues.org's take on the Democratic presidential candidates from left to center at Crazy Eddie's Motie News.


Three candidates tie with an economic score of 15. The one with the highest social score of 85 and therefore the most liberal is Jay Inslee. That makes him appear more liberal than his Voteview score, but that's eight years out of date. Again, he's probably moved left since he went from Congress to the Washington statehouse. Two candidates tie with social scores of 80, Tim Ryan and Andrew Yang. This makes Yang the most liberal non-politician in the contest. Considering that his signature issue is Basic Guaranteed Income, that shouldn't be a surprise. On The Issues considers all three Hard-Core Liberals.
The two Texans in the contest tie with an economic score of 18. Of the two, Beto O'Rourke has the second highest social score with a score of 88, ranking him under only Sanders and Mike Gravel, while Julian Castro is closer to the center with a social score of 78. Despite the clear difference in social score, On The Issues rates both as Hard-Core Liberals.
Two U.S. Representatives, Seth Moulton and Eric Swalwell tie with economic scores of 20. Moulton is the more liberal socially with a score of 85, tying with Warren and Inslee, while Swalwell is more moderate with a social score of 75. Swalwell qualified for this month's debate, while Moulton was one of four candidates who missed the mark. On The Issues rates both as Hard-Core Liberals, despite Swalwell's social score being only five points away from Gillibrand and just two points away from Pete Butigieg (below). Gotta draw the line somewhere.
Excerpted from OnTheIssues.org's take on the Democratic presidential candidates from left to center at Crazy Eddie's Motie News.