From Longman Dictionary of Contemporary Englishmiddle-of-the-roadˌmiddle-of-the-ˈroad adjective 1 MODERATEmiddle-of-the-road ideas or opinions are not extreme, and so most people are likely to agree with them a party offering safe, middle-of-the-road policies2 middle-of-the-road voters or politicians have ideas that are not extreme3 informal ordinary and not new, different, or exciting Their first album was quite good, but the second was very middle-of-the-road stuff.
Examples from the Corpus
middle-of-the-road• The figures are relative to a middle-of-the-road estimate of the course of the economy during the next twenty years.• We should have had, at best, a continuous middle-of-the-road government which could never have taken radical reforming measures.• Both were too sensitive about the middle-of-the-road, liberal, humanitarian public.• The Independent has remained independent from political allegiances though it too favoured a middle-of-the-road political outcome in the 1987 election.• The President's choice of a middle-of-the-road Republican with a strong record of educational reform received considerable bipartisan approval.• We grew up in a world of chainstore high fashion, middle-of-the-road revolution, cover-version original pop music.• Now, their last record was very nice and all the rest but it's very middle-of-the-road stuff.• He made a direct appeal to middle-of-the-road voters.• Wilson appealed to middle-of-the-road voters.