Jim Jordan's top 10 neighbors are a mix of conservative media figures and government-adjacent voices — journalists, TV personalities, a podcast host, news publishers, and government officials — with only one fellow politician, Ryan Fournier at 0.98, in the set.
The shape is flat: scores run from 0.99 down to 0.97 with no single dominant neighbor. Dan Bongino sits at the top (0.99), followed by Mark R. Levin (0.98) and One America News (0.98), but the gap between first and tenth is narrow enough that no one entity defines the cluster. Journalists account for two of the ten neighbors — Bongino and Jack Posobiec (0.97) — alongside TV personality Sean Hannity (0.98), government officials Kayleigh McEnany (0.97) and George Papadopoulos (0.97), actor James Woods (0.97), and political group Trump War Room (0.97). The cross-kind character of the set is the defining feature: the audience that follows Jim Jordan looks, in composition, more like the audience for conservative media outlets and commentators than for politicians as a subcategory.
That pattern — a politician whose nearest audiences are shaped primarily by media and commentary figures rather than other officeholders — points to an audience defined by media consumption habits as much as by electoral politics.