Finding synergy and omni-win solutions across political divides — on the wager that the best answer usually lives between the camps, not inside any one of them.
Most political debate is structured as a contest: one camp wins, the other loses, and the space between them is treated as weakness rather than territory worth exploring. Yet many of the positions that look irreconcilable are answers to different questions — one side optimizing for liberty, another for security, another for fairness — each naming something real that the others under-weight.
This quest treats those divides as design constraints rather than enemies. The goal is to surface the legitimate concern underneath each position and look for the solution that honours more of them at once: a synergy or omni-win that no single camp would have reached alone, because each was guarding only its own corner of the problem.
Adversarial politics is expensive. It burns trust, freezes useful reforms, and pushes both sides toward their most defensive positions. When the framing is zero-sum, even shared interests get sacrificed to the contest. A practice of looking for the answer between the camps is not about splitting differences or watering things down — it is about finding the rarer solution that meets several real needs at once.
Growing. The method is being practised and refined on real issues, with the working principle that a good synthesis has to be defensible to every side it draws from. The aim is a reusable bridging approach, not a single political answer.