Daria and Politics

The political views of the characters of the Daria show is a frequent topic of debate among fans. Because Daria Morgendorffer herself is so thoroughly characterized as both cynical and sarcastic, and fully lives up to those labels, it is hard to know whether to take her seriously when she offers her "opinion." It is generally believed that she, like most of the show's characters, has a mild leaning toward the political left. Her parents have much stronger attitudes about politics, but even they have moderated their views since their teenage years.

This article investigates what political attitudes various characters on the show are believed to have, based on canon sources from the TV series, the two MTV Daria books, the MTV Daria website, and scattered bits of material from the Beavis and Butt-head show. It also examines the political persuasions of characters in Daria fanfiction.

Daria's Politics in Canon Sources
In virtually every canon source available, Daria is outspokenly contemptuous of many aspects of late-1990s life in America. She reviles the middle-class way of life and its value system, mocks and challenges authority at every turn, and scorns her peers in every category from their intellects to their moral code. Her verbal barbs do not go unnoticed; Mr. O'Neill writes a letter to her parents in The Daria Diaries to complain about her disrespectful and wounding remarks, and Andrea confronts both Daria and Jane with the consequences of their sarcasm in "Mart of Darkness." One of Daria's most persistent nemeses, Ms. Li, even gives Daria a special award at the latter's graduation in Is It College Yet? for "dazzling academic achievement in the face of near-total misanthropy." (other examples)

Jake and Helen Morgendorffer
(hippies, "The Lawndale File," "Sappy Anniversary" flashback)

Angela Li
Principal Li is best known in the series for her grossly authoritarian and ruthless management style. While her character is generally acknowledged as being over the top for comic effect, the actual governing system she commands within Lawndale High borders on being a paranoid Stalinist police state that glorifies both herself and the school, in that order. A school memo from her that appears in The Daria Diaries is highly revealing of her attitudes and practices, and she and other characters make numerous off-hand remarks in the TV series about the school being outfitted with hidden cameras and bomb-sniffing dogs ("Jake of Hearts"), polygraph machines ("Fair Enough"), and bullet-proof skylights ("Too Cute").

Even more revealing, and putting her character even further over the top, is a letter she wrote on school letterhead that appears in The Daria Database (under "Political Acumen"), ostensibly mailed to then-governor George W. Bush of Texas. She congratulates the governor for the large number of executions under his administration, and in a breathtaking display of cheek explains that she is attempting to acquire actual electric chairs from Utah and Texas&mdash;the ones used to execute Gary Gilmore and Karla Faye Tucker, respectively, though she will settle for a copy of the latter&mdash;to place in the entrance hall of Lawndale High as a deterrent to students who might "cut a class, fail to use a No. 2 pencil, or otherwise start down the long road to a squandered, felonious life." She ends the letter expressing a hope that Bush will run for president in 2000, a rather prescient comment given that the book itself was published in November 1998.

Penny Lane
(rants in "Lane Miserables," The Daria Diaries, MTV website)

Politics in Daria Fanfiction
In Nick Gaston's Inauguration, an older Daria is elected to the U.S. Presidency, implicitly as an independant. She is noted to have received less than half a million votes in Texas.