[[QuestionableContent http://tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/professionalstrawman.png]]
[[caption-width:299:[[http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=1384 The life of a professional strawman]]]]
-->''"Some people say that running attack ads is just bad for our country. I say that those people have voted to raise taxes 95 times, and are probably from Massachusetts. In fact, a certain magazine recently ranked those people the number one most incorrect and probably gay people in Massachusetts, and the number one most personally against John Hodgman. So who are you going to trust? Me, or the probably-gay Massachusetts residents who are against me?"''
-->-- lifelong Massachusetts resident '''John Hodgman''', ''The Areas of My Expertise''
A strawman is any caricatured and 'deliberately-crippled' version of an opposing viewpoint that the author uses to try and support their position. It is possible for the protagonist to be a strawman — if someone writes a story about Bob the Foolish Liberal (or Bob the Foolish Conservative or whatever) doing nothing but foolish things in a way intended to make Liberalism/Conservatism look bad without really representing it honestly, it's a strawman — having someone in there telling him he's wrong (or even having any characters in the story that disagree with him) is not necessary as long as the author plainly disagrees with the philosophy that they're trying to attack.
For example, the Strawman Liberal, a character ostensibly meant to represent someone with liberal political views, but who appears to be based more on conservative criticism of liberal belief rather than on anything liberals actually believe. Common in right-leaning religious programming or in fiction with a strong ideological bent. Expect a hypocritically wealthy and/or impoverished freeloading hippy, with pacifism, political correctness, and free love sorta thing. May or may not be doing it all because [[HollywoodAtheist they hate God]]. There also tends to be a focus on letting obviously guilty folk go into the wild. They're doing it for the innocent children, though.
Its counterpart, the Strawman Conservative, is likewise found frequently in fiction with a left-leaning ideological bent. The Strawman Conservative is either ultra-religious or very traditional, and rabidly afraid to the point of intolerance of anybody who doesn't fit said criteria, and will try to have the law of the land rewritten to exclude, marginalise, or imprison them. Oh, and they always hate anyone who is different from them -- no exceptions for family or cross cultural friendships. They're doing it for the innocent children, though.
Another type of Strawman Political is a greedy, Machiavellian SmugSnake-esque character who cares only about the bottom line, while a third type can be [[CorruptChurch both at once]]. While the first two varieties can at least be said to have "good" intentions, the third can lay no such claim, and thus can serve as a primary antagonist as well as a simple obstruction.
Characters of these types are often extremely one-dimensional -- every aspect of their characterization is tied to the (mis)representation of their political philosophy. While always adversarial to the heroes, their role is usually obstructionist rather than outright antagonistic, and is usually played in a [[DyingLikeAnimals "It would be so much easier to get things done if it weren't for these pie-in-the-sky so-and-so's"]] sense.
The presence of such characters is often jarring and sometimes offensive to people who actually hold the beliefs that are being misrepresented. This is especially annoying when a normal member of the cast [[WeHaventLearnedAnythingYet suddenly loses IQ points]] to deliver AnAesop.
Another type of StrawmanPolitical is someone who is unable to effectively argue their side. The hero makes a statement and the StrawmanPolitical who is on the other side of the conversation is unable to make a decent rebuttal. This "proves" that the hero was right, because their opponent's statement is obviously incorrect or naive. This can overlap with the StrawHypocrite, by showing that those with opposing views don't have the moral strength to adhere to them (however "wrong" or "misguided" they were to begin with).
{{Sub Trope}}s:
* AnimalWrongsGroup
* TheCruella
* StrawFeminist
* MalcolmXerox
See StrawmanU for an entire university composed of {{Strawman Political}}s. See also FoxNewsLiberal for varieties trotted out for or by the media.
Additional note: please try to keep TruthInTelevision examples to a minimum. There's a very thin line between an actual StrawmanPolitical and a troper trying to paint someone as being a StrawmanPolitical. This page is FlameBait enough as it is.
It seems like people are forgetting the idea of a strawman. It isn't just making a character that seems like a stereotype. A strawman is someone put in place who opposes the hero's viewpoint in order to make the hero's viewpoint look good. Just a stereotype is not a strawman. They have to be contrasted by the protagonist. In other words, some stereotypes can be strawman but not every one is. For non strawman stereotypes, please put examples in PoliticalStereotype or ReligiousStereotype. See also YouFailLogicForever for other logical fallacies.
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!!Examples
[[foldercontrol]]
[[folder:Comic Books]]
* Almost every evangelist tract by JackChick features strawmen liberals as villains. Often he "proves" his arguments by having a character argue down a StrawmanPolitical.
** A particularly bad one is "Big Daddy", which is consists mostly of a blatant GaryStu debating evolution with a StrawmanPolitical science teacher. Guess who wins?
** Jack Chick outdid himself in a Crusaders and Alberto comics, where the main characters meet new political strawmen every issue who make such brilliant confessions as the Catholic Church is really a front for the Illuminati or Communism is actually a form of Satanism.
** Chick himself would probably be a StrawmanPolitical were it not for the fact that he actually exists.
* Comic book example: Goldilocks, from the Vertigo comic ''Fables'', seems to be this at first, with just about every negative stereotype about liberal feminists you can think of, spouting Communist rhetoric, exclaiming "Oh my Goddess!" at every turn; however, it turns out it's all an act to cynically manipulate her followers. Also, she's batshit insane.
* The CorruptCorporateExecutive version of Lex Luthor occasionally edged into Strawman Conservative territory, though when the character actually ran for president the writers were careful not to describe his political leanings at all. Though it's worth noting that at one point, Green Arrow decries something President Luthor has done with "This would never happen with a Democrat in the White House!" (Green Arrow's own leftist strawman status is debatable; make your own decision on whether his statement there was meant as a strawman's or dead serious.) In his defense, approximately 100% of Democrats ''aren't'' Lex Luthor, so he's probably right. Although the whole "supervillain" issue is probably more relevant.´
* TheDCU super-duo, Hawk and Dove, were ''created'' to exemplify this trope. In the original stories, penned by arch-conservative Objectivist SteveDitko, Dove, the pacifist, is portrayed as weak-willed, vacillating, and ineffectual, while his aggressive brother Hawk is the only one who manages to accomplish anything. Almost every writer ''since'' Ditko has portrayed Hawk as a thoughtlessly belligerent borderline berserker, with the rational, thoughtful Dove providing the only rational check on his action. Only rarely do we see a story where both viewpoints are treated with anything approaching equal regard, or a writer who admits the possibility that the different approaches might be appropriate in different situations. Ironically, this mainly came to the fore when Ditko was working with Steve Skeates, the more liberal co-creator of the duo. Characterization veered from side to side depending on who was doing the main plotting, until Skeates finally left the book over how Dove was being made into a wimp. When Hawk and Dove were later revived, the whole "conservative vs. liberal" thing was quietly dropped in the dustbin, and the two were recast as agents of Order (Dove) and Chaos (Hawk) meant to find a balance in tumultuous situations. Bonus Points: their father was a judge and always told them that they needed to see and understand each others side.
** Later taken to extremes when Hawk [[{{flanderization}} murdered Dove and became a brutal militaristic dictator.]]
* Frank Miller's ''TheDarkKnightReturns'' was notable for balance: it had a straw liberal psychiatrist who helped two super villains escape and blamed Batman for their crimes, and an unnamed straw conservative president [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed drawn exactly like Ronald Reagan]] who used Superman as a tool for militarism.
* The Daily Planet columnist Dirk Armstrong in {{Superman}} was created as a strawman conservative, though later writers gave him more depth and sympathetic qualities, such as having to raise a blind teenage daughter. His strawman status should have been obvious, given his physical resemblance to RushLimbaugh.
** In one story, he gives a taxi driver "the best tip you'll get all day!" Which amounts to telling the driver to buy his new book. Real class act, this guy.
*** Armstrong was symptomatic of the same {{dork age}} in the Superman books which gave us the blue energy Superman. Thankfully, soon after that storyline ended, he was {{put on a bus}} and has not been seen since.
* Many argue that IronMan (and many of the pro-registration heroes, such as Mr. Fantastic) became one of these in the MarvelComics CrisisCrossover ''Comicbook/CivilWar'', which dealt with [[SuperRegistrationAct superhero registration]]; originally, both sides were to be intended to have equally valid and reasonable justifications for the positions they adopted, but writers penning anti-registration stories kept having IronMan -- who was leading the pro-registration side -- commit atrocity after atrocity after atrocity in order to make their preferred side seem better. This ended up turning the pro-registration heroes into borderline fascists who were little better than super-villains themselves.
** This idea is pretty much left broken and bleeding on the curb when you realize that many of the atrocities Iron Man committed -- cloning Thor to give the pro-reg side moral authority (and keeping the clone around even after it killed Black Goliath), setting up an extradimensional gulag for unregistered heroes, and giving villains like Norman Osbourne, Venom, and Bullseye authority to track down and "restrain" unregistered heroes -- took place in the main ''Civil War'' miniseries. Which was written by Mark Millar, who claimed in a WordOfGod interview that ''he agreed with Tony's course of action'', and most people in the real world should, too.
** Euthanasia of one of his dearest friends (Iron Man), attacking ''Washington DC'' while impersonating a communist super villain (Amazing Spider-Man), hiring Baron Zemo and his Thunderbolts to capture super villains, ''and letting him keep them to build his own private army'' (New Thunderbolts), Attempting to defeat and capture Spider-Man, ''who saw him as a father figure at the time'', for not selling out his fellow heroes (Amazing Spider-Man), Appointing {{Ax Crazy}} {{Magnificent Bastard}} Norman Osborn as director of the Thunderbolts (Civil War Frontline, Thunderbolts)... we might have even missed a few. It is safe to say the other writers weren't actually rooting for Tony.
** Made worse when ''the same writers'' started using Tony as a punching bag, for example JMS, the writer of most of the above, would later have Thor beat up Tony.
** ''Invincible Iron Man'' has been averting -- or maybe reverting? -- this trope by portraying Tony in a sympathetic enough light that it's plausible to write off his most {{anvilicious}} moments from ''Civil War'' as the actions of a {{WellIntentionedExtremist}} rather than a self-centered fascist prick.
** And as of ''Dark Reign'', Stark is now [[NiceJobBreakingItHero a pathetic figure]], in that everything he's tried to build has simply allowed psychopathic opportunists like Norman Osborn to usurp control of Stark's apparatus and become a vastly corrupt secret dictator. Granted, its not Stark's fault that he wasn't able to anticipate the entire population of the United States being reduced to having the intellect of algae, that being how stupid you'd have to be to give Norman Osborn control of anything, let alone ''everything''.
**Not to mention characters like [[TheScrappy annoying twit Sally Floyd]], who would be an obvious strawman liberal under most other writers ([[WallBanger If you don't know anything about NASCAR or Myspace, you're hopelessly out of touch with the American public? Really?]]). WordOfGod says we're supposed to take her seriously. Captain America writer Ed Brubaker delivered a well-deserved TakeThat in Young Avengers Presents: Patriot, in which Cap's sidekick Bucky points out how stupid this line of reasoning is to fellow Cap-inspired hero Patriot. Amusingly, his phrasing matched something he said in an interview ''word for word''.
* ''[[http://accstudios.com/f/synopsis1.htm Liberality For All]]'' is summarized as such: ''It is 2021, tomorrow is the 20th anniversary of 9/11. America is under oppression by ultra-liberal extremists who have surrendered governing authority to the United Nations. Hate speech legislation called the “Coulter Laws” have forced vocal conservatives underground. A group of bio-mechanically enhanced conservatives led by Sean Hannity, G. Gordon Liddy, Oliver North, and a young man born on September 11, 2001, set out to thwart Ambassador Usama bin Laden's plans to nuke New York City.'' As hard it may seem to believe, this series does contain one or two strawman liberal depictions.
* ''normalman'' has both a Strawman Liberal ''and'' a Strawman Conservative, and they're technically the same character. That is, the malevolent, overzealous reactionary nutjob Ultra-Conservative, and his alternate personality, the radical, chaotic anarchist Liberalator. Ultra-Conservative eventually suppresses the transformation by thinking about "commie agitators", "pinko faggots", and the "death penalty" while shouting that he "will not '''''change!'''''"
* The various ''X-Men'' and spinoff series semi-regularly feature intolerant, hate-preaching [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Purifiers fundamentalist groups]] obviously based off televangelists and Southern Baptists with some Ku Klux Klan thrown in for good measure as villains. Several major arcs featured a Reverend Stryker becoming a major threat to the X-men. Less common, but still present on rare occasions, are religious folk shown opposing the extremist fringe. (Note also that anti-mutant discrimination is often played to echo historic discrimination against Blacks in America. That the actual emancipation movement first took root in religious circles is not similarly reflected.) They also, especially in the last few years, represent gays, so religious persecution makes perfect sense. That's the X-Men - they stand in for every minority group ever. And remember, just about any political view can be justified with the right interpretation of a religion.
** And people have complained from the very beginning that these people being so unequivocally wrong doesn't make much sense. Blacks, gays, uggos, Jews, etc. don't have the ability to make buildings explode with their minds.
* In Warren Ellis' ''{{Black Summer}}'', {{Well Intentioned Extremist}} John Horus assassinates the US President, who's actions bear a striking resemblance to the accusations leveled at {{George W Bush}}. This is treated by many of the others with a reaction generally equatable to "Sure, man, we all would have loved to have done it, that doesn't mean you ''should have''."
* GreenArrow Oliver Queen was shown as a hero for the people in his earlier stories, and had a majorly left-wing agenda, referring to rich conservatives as fat cats. Occasionally though, in more recent stories writers will let Queen's negative qualities such as his self-rightiousness or his contempt for aforementioned "Fat cats" get the better of him, and he comes off, intentionally or not, as something of a Straw Liberal. This is taken to extremes (and possibly played for laughs) in {{The Dark Knight Strikes Again}}.
* An early {{Garth Ennis}} issue of {{The Punisher}} had the titular vigilante (of all people) threatening President Bush, claiming the US brought 9/11 on itself, and ranting about the military industrial complex a mere few weeks after the attacks happened in {{Real Life}}.
* Pretty much any politician who appears in TheAuthority will be depicted as corrupt, greedy and too dumb to life. They also will be all Strawman Conservatives - and the more vocally they are opposed to the titualr gorup of superpowered sociopaths, the more Straw they get.
* In one of {{Preacher}} issues main character was listening to late-night debate between Straw Feminist and Straw Conservatist wich was so stupid that he get pissed, called to radio station and used his voice to make them confess what do they really want. They ''both'' said they want a penis.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Film]]
* ''Film/{{Superman}} IV: The Quest for Peace'' had a cadre of strawmen conservatives, and a William Hootkins, as Lex Luthor's henchmen. In a film that names a ''solar'' powered villain Nuclear Man, this hardly comes as a surprise. Wait, isn't Superman himself solar powered?
* ''TheAmericanPresident,'' the movie upon which ''TheWestWing'' based, doesn't mention what party the President or his opponent represent. The opponent, however, is portrayed as a pretty standard strawman conservative who sits around with his cronies smoking cigars and plotting evil. At one point he sings, "It's Beginning To Look A Lot Like Christmas" when he discovers that the incumbent President's girlfriend has a checkered past. It was pretty clear President Shepherd was a Democrat. His opponent's methods were based on the Republican rhetoric of the Bill Clinton era and he was attacked on his alleged lack of "family values", right-wing Newspeak ''par excellence''.
* ''The Contender'' stars Joan Allen as a U.S. Senator (formerly moderate Republican, now a Democrat, and a pro-choice atheist to boot) who is nominated for the Vice Presidency after the incumbent veep is killed. A Republican Congressman tries to block the nomination by dredging up her sexual past, but is unsuccessful, thanks in no small part to the efforts of the (Democratic) President. The "good guys" and "bad guys" are easy to spot. (Gary Oldman, who played the Republican Congressman, and the film's producer subsequently accused DreamWorks Pictures executives of [[ExecutiveMeddling re-editing the film]], which came out three weeks prior to the 2000 election, to make the Democrats more sympathetic.)
* ''Film/ShootEmUp'' featured both a Strawman Conservative and Strawman Liberal. Both of them quite literally kill babies, but like the rest of the movie their portrayal is pretty tongue-in-cheek. Though the Strawman Conservative was portrayed as being pretty much absolutely pure evil, and for extra anviliciousness had a monologue about how America having guns was great because it let cowards feel powerful, and seems to ''enjoy'' the idea of killing babies. The Strawman Liberal, however, was portrayed more as just having lost his way, and wound up [[spoiler: begging to be killed as an atonement and to help outlaw guns]]. So it's a CompleteMonster on one side versus one treated so sympathetically at that point he's almost TheWoobie. Not all strawmen are created equal, it seems.
* ''La Cage aux Folles'', and its [[ForeignRemake American remake]] ''TheBirdcage'', feature an obvious strawman conservative in the father of a gay man's son's fiancee. The French version has deputy Simon Charrier being played by Michel Galabru, who turns the straw into pure comedic awesomeness. And keep in mind that this being a ''French'' movie, Sarrier was not meant to be a strawman conservative, but a religious extremist: unlike the US and its Two Party System™, French religious extremists do not get along well with French conservatives and usually French conservatives do not feel they are targeted when watching the movie.
* In ''Nick of Time'', a prominent Republican governor suddenly switches to the Democratic party. The result is her entire staff, including her husband, conspiring to have her killed.
* ''Harold And Kumar Escape From Guantanamo Bay''. Almost every time a political opinion of any type is expressed.
* ''Blue State'' is actually more politically complex than the concept (two people moving to Canada after Bush gets re-elected) would imply, but the protagonist's father is a definite conservative StrawmanPolitical: he greets his son by calling him "Comrade Lenin," locks him for voting for Kerry, and begins to act like a deranged Bill O'Reilly on mushrooms when his son argues with him, screaming out to "cut his mic," and eventually throws his son out of the house.
* Mexican film ''Un Mundo Maravilloso'' was deliberately made as a giant leftist TakeThat to the liberal economic policies of recent governments in Mexico (but more specifically [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vicente_Fox Vicente Fox]]'s administration), the protagonist (a homeless, jobless hobo) and his friends several times blame "the system" and "the government" for his situation, and the minister of economy (the antagonist) in the end decides to '''outlaw poverty''' and for this he wins the Nobel Prize in Economy.
** Similarly, ''La Ley de Herodes'' (which is set in the 50s) from the same filmmaker has these two exchanges between an opposition party member and a strawman U.S. citizen:
--->'''Morales:'''Do you think democracy is the solution for poor countries like Mexico?
--->'''Robert:''' No no no, we Americans also like dictatorships like yours.
--->'''Morales:'''Is it true that your countrymen are still angry from the Mexican oil expropriation?
--->'''Robert:'''Well a little... yeah. But my countrymen know that one day we will recover all of that, and in time more, much more.
* In ''Hiding Out'', Jon Cryer is an adult accountant hiding out as a high school student. In a history class, the strawman conservative teacher gives a weak and histrionic defense of Richard Nixon as Cryer's character struggles to bite his tongue.
* Michael Malone, the protagonist of ''An American Carol'' is a strawman liberal caricature of Michael Moore. Indeed the whole film is a love letter to the Conservative Party.
* No mention of ''TeamAmericaWorldPolice", where every left-wing figure is portrayed as delusional, retarded and/or traitorous?
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Literature]]
* The novel ''BattlefieldEarth'' features a group of liberal "politicians" (recent stone age tribal leaders who [[DumbIsGood found some old books]]) who play an obstructionist role for the hero, unknowingly doing the bidding of the villain in the meanwhile. Not forgetting the Catrists, Strawman ''Psychologists''.
* The global government in the ''LeftBehind'' series starts out on the Straw-Lib end of the scale.
* Ayn Rand, as a WriterOnBoard promoting her philosophy of Objectivism, generally made the villains of her fictional works Strawman Socialists. In particular, not only does ''AtlasShrugged'' have lots and lots of Strawman Socialist villains, but their political beliefs are repeatedly blamed for every single disaster that happens in the story. In one episode, a passenger train is held up just short of a tunnel unsuitable for its steam locomotive, but is ordered to proceed nevertheless by a corrupt politician who is late for a rally and unwilling to wait for a diesel locomotive to carry the train through the tunnel. This means death for every passenger on board -- WhatASenselessWasteOfHumanLife, right? No -- the StrawmanPolitical beliefs of the doomed passengers are illustrated to show how their catastrophic demise was justified, because they were allegedly each NotSoDifferent than the politician. Even worse is ''Anthem'', where the Strawman Socialists have eliminated the use of the word "I" in favor of "We," where everyone sobs themselves to sleep in despair, and where the protagonist is ostracized after rediscovering electric lighting both for stepping out of his assigned role as a janitor and for threatening the jobs of candlestick makers. Yeah.
* In a particularly {{Anvilicious}} case of WriterOnBoard and AuthorFilibuster, in the ''SwordOfTruth'' books author TerryGoodkind has done the strawman routine on everything from liberalism to socialism to traditional religion to democracy in order to show that true freedom and enlightened rule can only come about under the rule of an Objectivist benevolent dictator who exhibits his fine morality with acts such as ordering the implementation of total war, riding down peace protesters "Armed with only their hatred of moral clarity", and arguing how they must [[FlatEarthAtheist live their lives free from backwards religious beliefs]] because there can be no proof of life beyond death...[[WallBanger despite the main character having extensive experience with spirits]].
* TomClancy's books are chock full of strawman liberals. Many people with liberal tendencies are either stupid, evil, or more likely, both. In his book ''Executive Orders'', Vice President Ed Kealty is the ultimate evil strawman liberal. However, there are some non-stupid non-evil liberal characters in prominent roles in the later Clancy novels, President Roger Durling and Senator Trent being two examples. Senator Trent is a particularly notable example, given that he's gay. None of the cast, however conservative, find his sexual orientation to be in any way objectionable, remarkable, or any of their business (even if Jack Ryan ''pretends'' to be a homophobic bigot to him once, with Senator Trent's cooperation, as part of selling a CIA disinformation campaign.)
** He avoids the Strawman Liberal when it comes to his Presidential characters. He has a corrupt Republican, an incompetent Democrat, an honorable Democrat , and independent AuthorAvatar Jack Ryan.
** His ''RainbowSix'' had strawman environmentalists, who wanted to save the Earth from humanity by killing off 99% of it. Though in reality, people like this do actually exist. Just google the 'Voluntary Human Extinction Society' for example.
* Most politicians in the [[HonorHarrington Honorverse]] get this treatment in some way - the good guys fall almost entirely into the Crown Loyalist or Centrist parties, while the bad guys and just plain nutcases/cowards are generally Conservatives and Liberals.
** There are at least two exceptions in the later books - Catherine Montaigne, who is a Liberal and yet not a total nutcase (though many of her views overlap with those of the Centrists/CLs) though she first appeared in a side story written by Eric Flint. That being said, Weber's more recent books have been rather more evenhanded in portraying political opposition, making a significant plot point out of Montaigne's reconstruction of the Liberal Party around sincere ideology instead of Countess New Kiev's hypocrisy.
** Her views overlap with the Crown Loyalists'/Centrists because their views are, obviously, in the center. The only way to avoid finding at least some common cause with them is to be on either the extreme right or left, and extreme views rarely turn out well. It should be noted that CL's and Centrists are lumped together because the Queen herself is just right of center (when she isn't royally pissed), and you wouldn't be a CL if you didn't mostly agree with the queen, or at least think that what she says goes.
** A second major exception comes in the form of Michael Oversteegen, notable for having the mannerisms of an aristocratic twit. He's the cousin of the leader of the strawman Conservative party, sincerely believes in the importance of a hereditary aristocracy (the Conservatives' main reason for existence)... and despises the corruption his cousin tolerates in the party. He's also a very talented and extremely brave naval officer.
** And of course there are the Grayson's who early on are strawman conservatives, but are at least mildly open to new ideas, and whose views shift closer to center for fairly realistic reasons (many of which center around Honor saving their asses, though their leaders had designs on reshaping the society even before she came along and gave them a symbol to rally around). The Grayson ultra-conservative faction are Strawman Conservatives, but look sane compared to the formerly-Grayson ultra-extremists of Masada, who are effectively the Space Taliban.
** The Graysons aren't really strawman types: they're very highly conservative, but it's a fairly natural development of their history and the [[DeathWorld extremely harsh conditions]] they live under.
* In another David Weber example, the ''Starfire'' novels (which, admittedly, are collaborative works) make it easy to tell who the sniveling mush-brained idiots of the Terran Federation are - they're the ones with 'Liberal' in their party name. The first novel written, ''Crusade,'' gives them the IdiotBall, and it seems they're still playing with it decades later. Although the Liberals' staunchest political allies (for reasons of pure self interest) are the Core World [[CorruptCorporateExecutive business interests]], who are Strawman Conservatives to a man, and carry the VillainBall just as often as the Liberals carry the IdiotBall.
* In any novel by J.T. Edson, any character described as 'liberal' will be a coward, a hypocrite and a homosexual. [[StrawLoser They will also be ugly and not bathe]].
* Pick a book, ''any'' book (but even moreso is solo work) by one [[http://www.baen.com/author_catalog.asp?author=TKratman Tom Kratman]]. ''A State of Disobedience'' is a classic study with a Liberal, Pro-Abortionist cabal led by the lesbian president [[NoCelebritiesWereHarmed Wilhelmina Rottemeyer]] launching [[strike:police actions]] political purges against a priest and other enemies of the state.
* The S.M. Stirling series ''Island in the Sea of Time'' and sequels have straw liberals: hippies who can't believe in Evil Natives who therefore die horribly at the Evil Natives' hands; and straw conservatives: who complain about the lesbian Coast Guard officer. His other books have other straw opponents, who exist solely to make ineffectual trouble.
** Not only do the straw liberals in ''Island'' die horribly, they accidentally ''wipe out'' the very Mesoamerican natives they want to protect (by infecting them with mumps, to which the natives have no immunity).
** Should be pointed out that the worst of the straw conservatives take themselves out Jonestown style rather early in the first book and that the black, lesbian Coast Guard Captain is the hero of the series.
* Being a staunch socialist, Upton Sinclair's books are chock full of capitalist straw men.
* ''MercyThompson'' has coherent and dangerous hate groups spring up every time a new supernatural species [[TheUnmasquedWorld leaves the masquerade]]. Often overnight. They are always religious, conservative, and popular enough to push a federal bill to declare werewolves -- at this point, going out of their way to only out their [[FriendlyNeighborhoodVampires everyday heroes]] [[PhlebotinumRebel using their curses to help others]] -- as non-citizens and [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman non-human]]. That's right, [[OurWerewolvesAreDifferent a bunch of inherently homophobic, sexist, hierarchical werewolves, most of whom seem to be suburban or rural men and their wives]], who tend to work for the military or government, that's what conservative Christians would rail against. Possibly subverted in ''Iron Kissed'', where Mercy infiltrates a hate group in search of a murderer. Her expectations and their posters bring up the typical nutjob concepts, but it's really just a small group of folk worried (justly) about TheFairFolk.
* HisDarkMaterials makes out that the Church is a dominating, overbearing, malicious institution that likes to break children away from their [[OurSoulsAreDifferent daemons]]... [[UtopiaJustifiesTheMeans to save them from themselves, of course.]]
* In the novel ''Prayers for the Assassin'', nuke attacks on American cities as well as Mecca result in blue America converting to Islam out of fear and compassion for the poor victimized Muslims, forming the Islamic Republic of America. Meanwhile, all the conservatives in those territories emigrate to the red Christian States of America.
* The ''Guardians'' series is chock full of Strawmen of every possible political stripe, including some of the viewpoint characters-- the original author seemed to be trying to be making the point that extremism of any form is bad (and if that's his message he sure did it in a muddled and confused way), but as new writers came in and the series got [[JumpTheShark sharkier]], it just got to be straw for straw's sake.
* In Orson Scott Card's ''Empire'' the Blue states attempt to secede from the Union, funded by a Straw Liberal Billionaire (though this was all set up by a conservative MagnificentBastard).
* Piers Anthony's ''Bio of a Space Tyrant'' is chock full of these, especially the Nixon stand-in.
* [[DivineComedy Dante]] put many of his political/religious enemies in Hell, making this OlderThanPrint
* Richard K. Morgan's ''Th1rte3n'' breaks the United States up into three countries along stereotypical (''extremely'' so in the case of the red states) red/blue lines.
* Galileo's ''Dialogue On The Two Chief World Systems'' has a Strawman Geocentrist named Simplicio. Part of what got Galileo in trouble was that he put the Pope's words in Simplicio's mouth.
* Heinlein's books all have obvious Strawmen-- if not the entire "jealous" or "ignorant" human population-- against the MarySue protagonists, since his political philosophies presented not only are insanely black-and-white-- but they also jump between various extremes on the political spectrum, depending on the year they're written, to the point of being bi-polar. For example in ''Farmer in the Sky,'' Earth faces a state of starvation due to Chinese overpopulation, while Heinlein nevertheless advocates AnAesop policy of "share and share alike," by other countries-- a Strawman which even the most extreme liberals would consider absurd. In contrast, in ''StarshipTroopers,'' Heinlein jumps to the manic-depressive opposite, advocating not only disenfranchisement-- as well as ''sterilization--'' of all non-veterans, but also corporal punishment for convicted criminals, as well as ''capital'' punishment for even insane persons who commit homocide. (This is all justified with various hamfisted Strawman-arguments comparing people to dogs-- which draw near to arguments for animal-abuse.) Then, in later stories such as "Stranger in a Strange Land," Heinlein once again jumps to ultra-elite liberterian views involving a rich and famous MarySue writer/doctor/lawyer, protecting an even ''more'' rich and famous MarySue Martian/Changeling/cult-leader, from an entire human society of fascist-politicians and religious-fanatics who want to stop/control/kill him-- but by doing so, are about to get the Earth blown up by Martians due to their dangerous and ignorant views: sort of an interplanetary version of ''Atlas Shrugged,'' along with simplistic Strawman arguments comparing humans to monkeys-- but at the same time, strangely, equating them to God. [[EpilepticTrees (It's rumored that the latter novel was written on a bet between Heinlein and L. Ron Hubbard, over which one could start an actual religious cult-- clearly, Heinlein lost: just ask Tom Cruise)]].
** This troper doesn't remember any sterilization of non-citizens in ''Starship Troopers'' - in fact the protagonist comes from a non-citizen family, and apart from being unable to vote, non-citizens have all the same rights as citizens. Such things as restricting the franchise to veterans, and corporal and capital punishment seem to have resulted from the collapse of national governments following a world war, and are therefore somewhat justified in-universe. It's also worth pointing out that society is portrayed as colour-blind, which is quite progressive for something published in 1959!
*** In TheMovie, there was an offhand comment about how citizens could get a license to have children more easily. That I think is the only example coming close to sterilization of non-citizens.
* Senator Sedgewick Sexton from Dan Brown's ''DeceptionPoint'', a Republican senator who starts out as an obvious scumbag and becomes more and more of a {{Complete Monster}} as the book progresses.
* Strawmen can be found in all manner of classical literature. Plato regularly used strawmen as opponents to Socrates in his Socratic Dialogues, making this trope OlderThanFeudalism.
* ''The {{Illuminatus}}! Trilogy'' has strawmen left right and centre. In the end, the authors have an Anarcho-Individualist lean, and its representives are protrayed as completely insane... in a good way. Various strawmen include [[FunWithAcronyms Knights of Christianity United in Faith]] and Simon Moon's parents (militant anarcho-syndicalist dad and anarcho-pacifist mom, which leads to embarassing situations such as Simon telling his third grade teacher that the US isn't a democracy).
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Live Action TV]]
* ''AllInTheFamily'' had the character Archie Bunker, who was created by producer Norman Lear to be a Neanderthalesque caricature of working-class conservatives. [[MisaimedFandom It backfired.]]
**Bunker was based on Alf Garnett of ''TillDeathUsDoPart'' and its sequels. Creator Johnny Speight claimed the character was based directly on his own father's opinions.
** Archie Bunker was balanced out with the strawman liberals of his daughter Gloria Bunker-Stivic and her husband Michael Stivic.
*** These were ''token'' Strawmen, who usually got the last word and/or were proven right by the end of the episode, leaving Archie with AnAesop which proves it.
* ''[[TwentyFour 24]]'' has featured both types in its run. Two examples include a lawyer for "Amnesty Global" in season 4 who exempts an arrested suspect from interrogation (having been paid by a terrorist leader to do so), and deputy chief of staff Tom Lennox in season 6, who detains thousands of innocent Muslim Americans without presidential authorization and openly talks of "suspending liberties" to safeguard the country. (In later episodes, however, Lennox becomes more of a MagnificentBastard than an IdiotOfTheWeek.) In quadruple irony the show is always ultimately geared towards the President's liberal and Protagonist's conservative values turning out to be correct. Detaining citizens of a radical religion HAS to be wrong, torturing terrorists HAS to be right. A restrained response to a downtown nuke HAS to be the right thing, despite the proven response to the much lower death toll of real life 9/11 being two wars and bloody hell in response to an errant nuke being the more likely consequence than a rogue maverick detaining citizens.
* [[http://www.ew.com/ew/article/0,,20013253,00.html This recent article]] in ''Entertainment Weekly'' bemoans former Strawman Conservatives on shows like ''Studio60OnTheSunsetStrip'' turning into liberals as they gain CharacterDevelopment.
* Averted in ''FamilyTies''. The producers had every chance to knock down the views of either the liberal parents or the conservative Alex, but instead, both ideologies were given positive looks. The liberals were made to look noble for their grassroots ideals, and the conservative was shown to be a hard worker. The show was reportedly one of President Reagan's favorites.
* The entire premise of the 2005 CBC series ''Jimmy [=MacDonald's=] Canada'' was a Strawman Conservative current affairs show host trying to cope with the 1960s, until he went AxCrazy in the last episode and crashed a plane into Northern Ontario. Since everything that bothered Jimmy happened several decades ago, no one feels offended by his over-the-top right wing leanings, as (most) modern conservatives have no objection to zambonis or Italian food.
* CBC comedy ''LittleMosqueOnThePrairie'' includes Fred Tupper, an offensive radio host who doesn't trust Muslims, as well as Baber, who believes that winegums, liquorice, and rye bread are part of a plot to trick Muslims into drinking alcohol. In one episode, Baber was able to patch up his religious differences with an ignorant redneck because they both felt equally strongly about same-sex marriage, or, as Baber called it, "The Abomination."
** It gets even more subversive when you consider that the imam, who would never conduct such a marriage, encourages the Anglican minister to.
* Considering that it's on the whole a [[SlidingScaleOfIdealismVersusCynicism pretty idealistic depiction]] of a Democratic Presidential administration, the writers of ''TheWestWing'' clearly attempt to avoid this trope and make an effort to present both sides of the issues fairly for a large part of the series. How successful it is in this respect tends to [[YourMileageMayVary vary according to the mileage, however]]; most Republicans who appear still tend to be Strawmen Conservatives and those who the audience is expected to like often [[FoxNewsLiberal tend to have beliefs towards the center or even the left of the political spectrum nevertheless]] -- for example, the sixth-and-seventh season Republican Presidential candidate, depicted as a genuinely honorable and decent man like his opponent, is a pro-choice secularist who appears to be a hidden atheist, viewpoints that would be unlikely to secure him his party's nomination in RealLife. Furthermore, when the main characters are proved wrong or lose it's usually less because their actual positions are wrong than they were stuck holding the IdiotBall that week or that they got overconfident.
** Ainsley Hayes was a clear Take That of sharp-tongued conservative pundit Ann Coulter, and as such is a BlondeRepublicanSexKitten.
* The {{CSI}} series (especially Miami) are a breeding ground for these characters.
* In a case of twisted irony, BBC's ''Bonekickers'' had an episode where [[http://www.moonbattery.com/archives/2008/07/bbc_show_depict.html fanatical Christians behead Muslims]]. Go figure.
** Sadly, except for the cause of death, [[http://www.thedenverchannel.com/news/18438582/detail.html#- that's not a strawman anymore]]. Crazy knows no creed, I guess.
* On ''[[MASHTheSeries M*A*S*H]]'', Major Frank Burns was a jingoistic, hypocritically pious, John Birch-style conservative JerkAss, while his successor Major Charles Winchester was a snobby Boston Brahmin type and Establishment Republican. (Then again, most of the series was mocking anyone who was pro-war, including [=MacArthur=] and just about every other general in the Army, as well as quite a few conservative celebrities of the time. Of course, in [[TheFifties the actual 1950s]], conservatism was even more conservative than its modern incarnation.)
** Winchester tended to waffle back and forth between conservative and liberal traits (as well as a number of other, non-political traits), depending on how sympathetically he was supposed to be viewed in the episode. Basically some writers attempted to make him Frank Burns with a New England accent, while others wrote him as a distinct character with his own set of foibles, not all of them negative. Though overall he's still a pretty textbook example, since the less positively-viewed he was supposed to be, the more of a conservative strawman he seemed to become.
** He did tell the aide to the [=McCarthy=] stand-in that he was so conservative he made [=McCarthy=] look like a New Dealer.
** Winchester changed with the CharacterDevelopment episodes, becoming far quite liberal, supposedly "becoming wise" by the harsh realities of war compared to his earlier sheltered lifestyle-- particularly after Alan Alda took over the show's writing and production for Larry Gelbart. This making him the perfect mold of the StrawmanPolitical, i.e. first a pompous ass, and then converted by the show's political bias.
** Frank Burns became so over-the-top that his strawman behavior was justified by the RuleOfFunny. Towards the end of his run on the show, it had gone so far that Frank was almost a parody of a strawman conservative.
[[/folder]]
[[folder: New Media ]]
* The YouTube Video [[http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eaGgpGLxLQw Beware the Believers]] plays the straw evolutionist for laughs.
* [[http://conservapedia.com Conservapedia]]: "The Trustworthy Encyclopedia". All articles on Democratic/Liberal/Evolutionary topics are built of straw.
** [[http://rationalwiki.com/wiki/Main_Page RationalWiki]] is a direct reaction against Conservapedia that takes constant potshots at conservatives, fundamentalists, Conservapedia, and ''especially'' its founder, Andrew Schlafly. Unlike Conservapedia, though, they make no claims to objectivity.
* PoesLaw describes the difficulties inherent in separating applications of StrawmanPolitical by [[KnightTemplar certain evangelical Christians]] and parodies of the same.
* [[http://www.funnyordie.com/videos/c0cf508ff8/prop-8-the-musical-starring-jack-black-john-c-reilly-and-many-more-from-fod-team-jack-black-craig-robinson-john-c-reilly-and-rashida-jones Propositon 8: The Musical]]. You tell a group of Straw Conservatives when you see them.
* The Year Zero ARG, which promotes the NineInchNails album of the same name, depicts the United States after 15 additional years of rule by Strawman Republicans.
** It gets absolutely ridiculous. It's stated they're forbidding women to work, have genocidal bands of Christians killing non Christians in certain suburbs, they make their soldiers take drugs to both combat the drug the evil neocons poisoned everyone with (yes, that's what they did) and get Special Forces to take even worse drugs that forces the body to equate killing with sexual excitement, the local MegaCorp exploits drug addicts to boost their profits, and they make up "terrorists" by creating a virus.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Newspaper Comics]]
* Pretty much any liberal, Democrat, liberal Democrat, or member of a minority group that appears in Bruce Tinsley's ''MallardFillmore''.
* ''{{Doonesbury}}'' often features straw conservatives, as have ''BloomCounty'' and its spinoffs.
* ''{{Candorville}}'' features strawmen of both liberal and conservative varieties, and then lampshades them all to heck.
* ''GetFuzzy'' uses Bucky Katt for a conservative-as-idiot strawman, with Satchel Pooch as his [[VitriolicBestBuds Vitriolic Best Bud]] counterpart on the left.
* Rat in ''PearlsBeforeSwine'' is also used as a conservative strawman. Given that ''Pearls'' creator Stephan Pastis and ''Fuzzy's'' Darby Conley are close friends, it's hard to guess who's copying who.
** In the notes to the treasury collections, artist Stephan Pastis indicates that Rat is simply himself with less self-restraint. Whether that still qualifies Rat for Strawman status is debatable.
* Winslow the coyote pup from ''PricklyCity''. In one early story, he suggested that he and his human companion, Carmen, get married, so that the author could equate gay marriage with bestiality.
* Aaron [=McGruder=]'s ''TheBoondocks'' had plenty of these. (The strip's protagonist, Huey Freeman, could arguably be deemed a Strawman Black Radical, except that we're clearly meant to sympathize with him.)
* Going further back, ''LittleOrphanAnnie'' and ''[=~Li'l Abner~=]'' frequently served up liberal versions, while ''{{Pogo}}'' featured them on both sides (though more often as conservatives, given Walt Kelly's politics).
* Use of the trope in newspaper editorial cartooning is satirized by ''[[http://www.theonion.com/ The Onion's]]'' "Kelly" (actually, Ward Sutton). In the persona of a cranky conservative, "Kelly" returns again and again to caricatures like the NewAgeRetroHippie ([[http://www.theonion.com/content/cartoon/nov-17-2008 here]]), TeensAreMonsters ([[http://www.theonion.com/content/cartoon/mar-02-2009 here]]), using TheGrimReaper to symbolize disliked trends ([[http://www.theonion.com/content/cartoon/oct-20-2008 throughout]]) and so on. Actually not too far off from the technique of newspaper cartoonist ''Chuck Asay''.
** And of course half the comics ''have the Statue Of Liberty cring''
* The reason we have newspaper comic strips is that during the 19th century editors discovered funny, topical, easy to read drawings helped sell more papers--and the artists were expected to adhere to the paper's editorial slant.
** This proving that old habits die hard.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
* The Imperium of Man, the "protagonists" through whose eyes much of the setting of ''{{Warhammer 40000}}'' is seen, are an over-the-top portrayal of fascism taken [[BeyondTheImpossible well past its (il)logical extreme]] (and let's not kid ourselves here, real-world fascism is pretty terrifying to begin with).
** But only as a whole, the planets do vary, and most Planetary Governors (which are really more like Kings/Queens, but due to religion can't be called that) are ReasonableAuthorityFigures.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Theatre]]
* Louis Ironson of ''AngelsInAmerica'' reads very much like a {{Deconstruction}} of the Strawman Liberal stereotype. At least, [[YourMileageMayVary he does to this troper]].
* Mr Birling from ''An Inspector Calls'' is a prime example of a British conservative straw man. J.B. Priestly givea the audience no doubt that he is wrong about everything, including his political and social opinions.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Video Games]]
* Andrew Ryan from the game ''{{Bioshock}}'' starts out as an ''Objectivist'' straw man, for those folk that the greedy conservative straw man just can't sate. Later on, its revealed that the downfall of Rapture occurred as a result of a political opponent's scheming and Ryan becoming a rather twisted KnightTemplar, but at the beginning the whole thing seems rather {{Anvilicious}}.
* The Weasel News Network of ''GrandTheftAuto IV'' is pretty much a direct Take That against Fox News Network. (Get the pun?). Everything about the network is portrayed as CrossingTheLineTwice.
** For that matter, 90% of the satirical media in GTA IV is Straw Conservative. Its to the point that it's not even very funny anymore.
*** ''GTA: ViceCity'' had a talk show where right and left-wing strawen tried to out-straw each other, though admittedly comments like "Your father made lots of money, which makes him a great man" are more memorable than whatever the other side had to say.
* The radio messages in ''VampireTheMasquerade: Bloodlines''. They add nothing to the story, and serve ''only'' to portray a fictional right-wing politician as a sleazeball. To be fair, the radio is purely there for comedy and everyone who appears on the radio is presented as a complete idiot. Most of Bloodlines doesn't really look favorably on anyone, except the liberal Nines, the conservative Bertram, and the independents Beckett and Jack. Or you could flip the first two, as Nines views government as needing to be small and Bertram as large.
** RealLife Liberalism and Conservatism have flipped their views of government size and responsibility a couple of times over the centuries, so why shouldn't their fictional followers?
** Also, at one point, a bartender asks what your darkest secret is. After passing over several opportunities to own up to things you've done over the course of the game, one of your options is [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking "I voted Republican one time."]] The bartender [[EvenEvilHasStandards says she can't help you]] [[MoralEventHorizon with that one]].
* In a very early example, {{Infocom}}'s ''AMindForeverVoyaging'' was intended as a critique of the Reagan era of conservative capitalism. The part where they didn't remotely use any of Reagan's actual policies, save for tax cuts, didn't help it any. It also didn't help that Senator Ryder, the BigBad, was written as so psychotically evil that when the aforementioned psychohistorical forecasting shows that the end result of his plan will be that within 20 years the country will be bankrupt, within 40 years his hoped-for government will be overthrown by an apocalyptic religious cult and he will be either a powerless serf or dead, and that within 50 years ''human civilization will cease to exist'', he isn't deterred a bit -- just so long as he wins the next Presidential election, who cares if he's dooming the human race ''and'' himself personally? A more cartoonish straw man you would be hard-pressed to find.
** And the vaguely explained social welfarism that the game's ending provides seems to create a utopian society. It's a shame as it's otherwise an excellent game, if anvilicious to the extreme.
* The freeware game by [[DwarfFortress Tarn Adams]], ''LiberalCrimeSquad'' is entirely built around this. America is slowly becoming incredibly conservative, and you play as the titular group of criminals, who are willing to murder and sabotage society to get everyone to become liberal. Your main enemies are the Conservative Crime Squad, who are just as crazy as the Liberal Crime Squad.
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Webcomics]]
* Just about every political webcomic features an abundance of nameless straw men politicial opposing the author's opinion. Occasionally, they will try to add in straw men of their own demographic in an attempt to show that they're not biased, but these straw men are either too subtle and argue about very minor points, or are ridiculously exaggerated in a way that makes them not even remotely believable.
* Cecania and Fairbanks in ''[[http://sorethumbsonline.com/ Sore Thumbs]]'' are hilariously exaggerated strawmen of liberals and conservatives respectively. Each of them seems to have taken their ideology to a ridiculous extreme, and then taken the ridiculous extreme to a ridiculous extreme, leading to such things as Fairbanks having once killed a man because "he looked like a terrorist" and Cecania having been known to demonstrate outside abortion clinics because they won't offer drive-through service. Cecania is still presented as being a lot more sympathetic, though.
* Chris Muir's ''[[http://www.daybydaycartoon.com/ Day by Day]]'' has characters on both ends of the political spectrum, but the conservative/libertarian characters (including product designer and Special Ops sniper Zed, black Republican Damon, and [[BlondeRepublicanSexKitten Redheaded Republican Sex Kitten]] Sam) are portrayed as both principled and cool, while liberal Jan is often portrayed as being a bit histrionic and over the top; however, the comic itself points out that the characters respect her because she actually ''believes what she's saying'' and says it because she's honestly trying to help others. This is pointed out in one comic where it's said Jan is a "dove", and that she's sincere about it (as opposed to many who claim the title and simply "sit around and shit all over everything"). There's even an arc chastising Damon for going too far with his arguing against her, where he acknowledges he needs to be more respectful of her ideals.
**Of course, since having her go through an obligatory OppositesAttract romance with Damon, Jan has increasingly shifted to being a FoxNewsLiberal, with her position of Straw Liberal taken over by Sam's sister [[CousinOliver Skye]], who has nearly no redeeming qualities whatsoever.
* In ''QuestionableContent'', being a professional Strawman is Angus's [[http://www.questionablecontent.net/view.php?comic=1384 occupation]]. This means that he gets paid to appear on debates with ludicrous arguments and lose... must be awesome. When he goes up against ''another'' professional Strawman, they end up actually competing as to who can give a worse argument.
* ''CtrlAltDel'' had religious leaders from all over the world to temporarily put aside their differences to beat up upon Ethan's new Gamer Religion, and Lucas manages to dumbfound them with some minor piece of wisdom that they are utterly slackjawed to answer.
** Are you sure they were slackjawed, and not just using the usual 'mouth open, eyes glazed over' CtrlAltDel facial expression?
** They had to deliberate and come up with an incredibly stupid reason to counter, instead of giving them [[http://img525.imageshack.us/img525/4871/1188274586199qm3.jpg this]] gem.
* ''Hackles'' has Marcus, their marketing mouse. He is used to support anything uncool, such as some conservatism (although they don't really get into politics, everyone is "moderate"), Windows users, poor web design, poor software design and marketting. He would be a ButtMonkey if he didn't deserve what happens to him (he is a mouse, and some of the characters are mice...including his nurse/date).
[[/folder]]
[[folder:Western Animation]]
* ''JusticeLeagueUnlimited'' features a sinister, straw-conservative American general who complains about the "bleeding hearts in Congress" and turns himself into a supervillain in order to defend America from heroes. The series also features a cowardly straw-Bill O' Reilly type character.
* ''BatmanTheAnimatedSeries'' features a villain not taken from the comic pages, Lock-Up, who is a straw-conservative and vigilante who despises the "liberal media" and enjoys throwing everyone he doesn't like into prison. Lock-Up may have been an attempt to make Batman seem more liberal by comparison, since Batman, a rich private citizen who succeeds where the corrupt public system fails, has been accused of being a conservative-friendly character.
* The villain "Looten Plunder" on ''CaptainPlanetAndThePlaneteers'', a completely amoral capitalist who dreams of "stripping entire continents" for monetary gain, was a strawman conservative (At least [[CardCarryingVillain he had a reason, though.]])
* ''SouthPark'' has also featured both conservative and liberal strawmen. To name just one of many examples, the episode "Goobacks" features a debate on ''The O'Reilly Factor'' between a "pissed-off white-trash redneck conservative" and an "aging liberal hippie douche" (who are actually called that) over the titular temporal immigrants. The liberal spouts vapid homilies about how "America was founded on immigration", while the conservative simply rants "Dey turk our jaaaaaaaarbs!"
** That ''particular'' example is semi-parodical, though. It's somewhat of a commentary on how shows like ''The O'Reilly Factor'' generally feature strawmen who fit into one of those two molds surprisingly well, instead of normal people. 'Cause who wants to watch normal people, anyway?
** "For the War, against the War, who cares! One hundred episodes!"
** "What. The. Hell. This town sucks."
**The "Butt Out" episode featured an over-the-top Rob Reiner as such an out of control zealot that he actually tries to [[spoiler: kill Cartman]] just to ban smoking. Conversely, the tobacco industry is portrayed as being without fault: when the boys learn that tobacco plantations used African slaves, one remarks "so without tobacco, many of our black friends wouldn't be here!"
** There's no reason to fake it when it's ambiguous enough to drive a truck through, and relies on an ignorance of probability to appear more dangerous than slicing your carotid while shaving... with a safety razor.
** Honestly, it's not just politics. ''Anyone'' Parker and/or Stone disagree with or dislike gets this treatment from politicians to writers to movie-makers and will always have bad thing happen to them. The thing is that they make the {{Take That}}s so [[RefugeInAudacity grotesquely over-the-top]] (frequently showing said strawmen as such things as megalomaniacs, people who don't even think their own ideas don't make sense, rapists, and literally the world's largest piece of shit) that [[RefugeInAudacity people find them funny instead of self-indulgent and condescending]].
** The 2008 election episode subverted all of this by making all the politicians involved (Except, oddly enough, Biden) rather intelligent jewel thieves.
*** Given that they're evidently Libertarians I doubt that counts.
* ''TheBoondocks'' episode ''Wingmen'' featured Dewey Ababaoo Mamasee Mamasay Mamakusa Jenkins, a fake Muslim who writes bad poetry because he's "down with the struggle." Huey, an actual leftist revolutionary, finds him disgraceful.
** Of course, Huey himself is a strawman, but so is everyone else on the show and comic. One thing you can say about [=McGruder=], he's balanced in his extremities. Except Caesar (comics), who is essentially the CloserToEarth StraightMan for whom Huey gets too extreme/obsessed.
** Their portrayal of Ann Coulter is a subversion: she appears on TV as a massively hateful ranter, but it's just an act for publicity.
** By a similar token, Rev. Rollo Goodlove, a NoCelebritiesWereHarmed version of Al Sharpton, is a self-serving liberal hypocrite who intentionally attaches himself to bogus "struggles" for publicity.
** Huey's neighbor Tom Dubois and his wife, though played as decent people, are milquetoast, establishment Strawman Democrats who live far away from Huey's reality. Tom once tried to kidnap Ralph Nader for taking votes away from Al Gore. (Thus earning the title of "the first moderate liberal extremist.")
* More recent episodes of ''FamilyGuy'' are also doing this to an almost insane extent. Conservative Americans or people from the DeepSouth (which the show seems to define as anyplace outside of the Northeast or West Coast) are nearly always built into Strawman Conservatives, and the show rarely misses a chance to take a potshot at George W. Bush or anyone affiliated with him, usually in a manner that is about as {{Anvilicious}} as you can get. The basic message: if you're a conversative, you ''must'' be (literally) retarded at ''best.'' One joke was nothing but three characters repeating the words "Laura Bush killed a guy." No joke, no satire, no possible reason for why that should be a joke even if it did happen.
* ''KingOfTheHill'' does that a lot with liberal and intellectuals/elites (such as Professors and Doctors), sometimes combining the two. However, it does have some hilarious moments as during the parodying of pc people, when [[spoiler:Hank's whole church is having a whole prayer intervention over Hank's racism, because of his dog.]] You could say that Hank (and in early seasons, Dale) is this trope as well. Dale being the stereotype of the right that thinks the government is watching our every move, while Hank more of the traditionalist right.
* ''TheSimpsons'' uses these on occasion, typically conservative ones. The local Republican Party's usual meeting place is in a sinister castle, and their members include a vampire and [[VillainBall Mr. Burns]]. In "Sideshow Bob Roberts", the Republicans nominate known SerialKiller Sideshow Bob as a mayoral candidate.
** They even mistake a water cooler for the candidate at first.
* ''Harvey Birdman: Attorney at Law'' featured some Animal Liberation Nut Strawmen in "Free Magilla"; they freed all the animals from Mr. Peeble's pet store, even though this seemed to cause the creatures more anxiety than relief. When Magilla Gorilla later reunites with Mr. Peebles, he asks him to "Take me home- home to my nice, safe cage", the group who stole him splashes red paint on him and shouts "Animal freedom now!"
* In ''Awful comics'' leader of conservatits was revealed to be [[PowerRangers Lord Zedd]].
[[/folder]]
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