Not really. Most objective sources would say he is a centrist Democrat-- he is liberal on some social issues, and conservative on issues such as defense.
No. He is quite liberal
Barack Obama
Barack Obama is the 44th president of US.
Barack Obama has always been a Democrat. Some sources say his maternal grandparents, who raised him, were moderate Republicans, but since he first ran for office in 1996, Mr. Obama has been identified with the Democratic party.
Franklin Roosevelt.
No. He is quite liberal
The Democratic political group endorses Barack Obama. Private liberal political groups also endorse President Obama. He became president in 2009.
He was known as the most liberal Senator.
Barack Obama's political enemies have said he was the most liberal member of the senate, but facts (such as his voting record) do not support that statement. He was liberal on social issues but conservative on law-and-order issues. As president, most scholars and experts agree he has governed as a centrist Democrat.
No. He is quite liberal
President Obama probably won't have an opportunity to change the balance of the Supreme Court, because the justices most likely to leave office during Obama's tenure are both considered liberal, and would be replaced by other liberals. The only way Obama can change the tenor of the Court is by replacing a conservative justice with a liberal, a vacancy unlikely to occur in the foreseeable future.
Barack Obama is a centrist. Liberals, like the Socialists and Green Party, decry Obama's use of SuperPAC money, his failures in human rights, and his support for the military industrial complex. In most European countries President Obama would be considered a moderate conservative.
Almost every media outlet, tv, newspapers, radio, magazines. All liberal media promote him.
President Obama
Liberal refers to a political ideology that typically advocates for individual freedom, equality, and government intervention in areas such as social welfare.
Obama
Barack Obama's political enemies have said he was the most liberal member of the senate, but facts (such as his voting record) do not support that statement. He was liberal on social issues but conservative on law-and-order issues. As president, most scholars and experts agree he has governed as a centrist Democrat.