The top 10 neighbors for The Democrats form a tightly compressed cluster — scores run from 0.98 down to 0.94, a span of less than four points — with no single dominant neighbor and no structural outlier pulling the shape in an unexpected direction.
The mix is predominantly Political Groups and Politicians. Senate Democrats leads at 0.98, followed by DCCC at 0.96 and House Democrats at 0.96 — three fellow Political Groups organizations occupying the top three positions. Politicians fill the next tier: Stacey Abrams at 0.95, Cory Booker at 0.95, Nancy Pelosi at 0.95. The two departures from that pattern are PBS, a TV Channel at 0.95, and HuffPost Politics, a News Publisher at 0.95 — both sitting comfortably inside the same narrow band rather than standing apart from it. Joy Reid, a Journalist, and MoveOn, an Activism organization, round out the ten at 0.94 each. That gives the top 10 a subcategory breakdown of three Political Groups, four Politicians, one Journalist, one TV Channel, and one News Publisher — a cluster defined almost entirely by partisan political infrastructure and the media that covers it.
The flat shape reflects an audience with a highly consistent composition: wherever this audience appears, it looks the same, and that sameness extends across party organs, individual officeholders, and the political press simultaneously.