Welcome to DU!
The truly grassroots left-of-center political community where regular people, not algorithms, drive the discussions and set the standards.
Join the community:
Create a free account
Support DU (and get rid of ads!):
Become a Star Member
Latest Breaking News
Editorials & Other Articles
General Discussion
The DU Lounge
All Forums
Issue Forums
Culture Forums
Alliance Forums
Region Forums
Support Forums
Help & Search
The Way Forward
Related: About this forumDemocrats are in Crisis, Eat the Rich Populism is the only way forward
an air of denial and, more recently, panic has pervaded the discussion about what comes next. Its easy to say drastic reform is needed, but theres no agreement on what this should look like. In practice, the party establishment is doing what party establishments always do: counting on the other side to self-destruct so it can squeak back into power while changing as little as possible.
The strategy would be a lot more defensible if Democrats could write off Trumpism as a fever that was bound to break with time. But the evidence of the past few years points in the opposite direction shrinking populations in blue states, an alarming drop in Democratic voter registration, dire math for retaking the Senate and crushing majorities who say the party is out of touch. Worst of all is the ongoing rightward shift in the working class, a challenge that goes beyond winning elections to strike at the heart of what it means to be a Democrat.
This kind of full-court press for the working class is a gamble. But there are no safe choices for a party whose approval ratings are bouncing around 35-year lows. Exhuming Liz Cheney one more time with the hope of turning out white-collar suburbanites is another risk, and in a country where the median full-time worker earns just under $63,000 a year and about 60 percent of adults dont have a college degree, the numbers are with the populists. For every stockbroker in Greenwich that the party loses, there are two janitors in Kenosha to be won the building blocks of a durable, coherent majority that can break through the paralysis in Washington and level the playing field for working Americans
But in a polarized party system, the true king makers the voters who decide elections dont fall neatly into the left or the right.
According to Echelon, populists with fiscally liberal and socially conservative views are by far the largest group of swing voters, at 22 percent of the electorate. Libertarians are a distant fourth, with just 5 percent. Democrats have struggled over the last decade because their biggest gains came from this smallest section of voters, while Mr. Trump cleaned up with populists.
The strategy would be a lot more defensible if Democrats could write off Trumpism as a fever that was bound to break with time. But the evidence of the past few years points in the opposite direction shrinking populations in blue states, an alarming drop in Democratic voter registration, dire math for retaking the Senate and crushing majorities who say the party is out of touch. Worst of all is the ongoing rightward shift in the working class, a challenge that goes beyond winning elections to strike at the heart of what it means to be a Democrat.
This kind of full-court press for the working class is a gamble. But there are no safe choices for a party whose approval ratings are bouncing around 35-year lows. Exhuming Liz Cheney one more time with the hope of turning out white-collar suburbanites is another risk, and in a country where the median full-time worker earns just under $63,000 a year and about 60 percent of adults dont have a college degree, the numbers are with the populists. For every stockbroker in Greenwich that the party loses, there are two janitors in Kenosha to be won the building blocks of a durable, coherent majority that can break through the paralysis in Washington and level the playing field for working Americans
But in a polarized party system, the true king makers the voters who decide elections dont fall neatly into the left or the right.
According to Echelon, populists with fiscally liberal and socially conservative views are by far the largest group of swing voters, at 22 percent of the electorate. Libertarians are a distant fourth, with just 5 percent. Democrats have struggled over the last decade because their biggest gains came from this smallest section of voters, while Mr. Trump cleaned up with populists.
He goes on to say 10% of Trump voters in 2020 were Bernie Bros, probably more so in 24. Timothy Shenk on the NYT op ed page. Worth reading the whole thing https://www.nytimes.com/2025/09/29/opinion/democrats-dan-osborn.html?unlocked_article_code=1.rE8.Wcw0.lzDP0UNpvETG&smid=url-share
3 replies
= new reply since forum marked as read
Highlight:
NoneDon't highlight anything
5 newestHighlight 5 most recent replies

Democrats are in Crisis, Eat the Rich Populism is the only way forward (Original Post)
somsai
Sunday
OP
We don't need to eat them. We just need to tax them. And break up their monopolies.
Scrivener7
Sunday
#2
WSHazel
(592 posts)1. That column is terrible advice
The Republicans are winning 70% of white working class voters. Suburban and urban voters, together with social issue liberals, is the future of the Democratic Party.
Scrivener7
(57,374 posts)2. We don't need to eat them. We just need to tax them. And break up their monopolies.
And overturn Citizens United so they can't buy elections.
carpetbagger
(5,380 posts)3. The math says this is the way.
We won't be nominating social conservatives any time soon. But the yoyo has hit the bottom where we get control for 2 years in a crisis, but by the end of 4-8 years America can't tell the difference between the parties on economic issues.