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Passages

(2,418 posts)
Tue Apr 1, 2025, 06:56 PM Tuesday

Can the Democrats Reclaim Economic Populism?

That challenge is key to winning back voters who deserted the Harris-Walz ticket in 2024. Some rank-and-file members are calling for something new.

by Robert Kuttner, David Dayen
April 1, 2025

Sen. Chris Murphy of Connecticut, usually more of a liberal than a radical, declared last weekend that the Democratic Party is “a pretty broken brand right now,” and suggested that the only cure was full-throated economic populism as the “tentpole.” Speaking in an interview with The New Yorker’s David Remnick, Murphy added that the whole party needed to sound more like Bernie Sanders and Elizabeth Warren.

A majority of voters agree that the Democrats are a broken brand. Recent polling shows that just 27 percent of voters polled have a favorable view of Democrats, a record low. Murphy, like Warren, Sanders, and AOC, contends that economic populism is the one theme that can both shame Trump and his billionaire allies and also bridge over the party’s other internal differences. He is worth quoting at length on this point:

SNIP
BUT FILLING THE LEADERSHIP VACUUM doesn’t end there. Last week, in a remarkable series of speeches on the House floor, a group of rank-and-file Democrats from different parts of the ideological spectrum challenged the party establishment to embrace economic populism, rather than begging for donations from the rich and participating in the corruption.

Rep. Chris Deluzio (D-PA) of the Pittsburgh area helped coordinate the speeches. He represents a working-class sliver of Beaver County, a Trump-friendly area that he won by significantly more than Harris. “This administration is wreaking havoc on this country of ours, and our party has not offered a strong enough alternative,” he said in his speech. “The era of a spineless Democratic Party must end. We have to go to the mat for an economy that works for people who work hard and play by the rules.”
https://prospect.org/politics/2025-04-01-can-democrats-reclaim-economic-populism/


We absolutely can do this and we must.

7 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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Can the Democrats Reclaim Economic Populism? (Original Post) Passages Tuesday OP
We did Keepthesoulalive Tuesday #1
Only if... Chasstev365 Tuesday #2
Agree. Contest everything. In every state. bronxiteforever Tuesday #3
Democratic analysts have been warning us for at least a dozen years somsai Tuesday #4
Yes, if the party picks up on the messages and wild response to Bernie Sanders and AOC. usonian Tuesday #5
Thank you for that link. Passages Yesterday #6
For decades, comments have been made that Democrats need backbone strengthening exercises. Gum Logger 8 hrs ago #7

Keepthesoulalive

(1,132 posts)
1. We did
Tue Apr 1, 2025, 07:01 PM
Tuesday

They chose to vote for a lying conman. Joe Biden was for the working class. Trump gave rich folks tax breaks.

bronxiteforever

(10,241 posts)
3. Agree. Contest everything. In every state.
Tue Apr 1, 2025, 07:41 PM
Tuesday

We are the regular person’s party. They are the party of billionaires.

somsai

(96 posts)
4. Democratic analysts have been warning us for at least a dozen years
Tue Apr 1, 2025, 08:50 PM
Tuesday

This is nothing new. Statistically there has been a very quantifiable shift. Barack Obama was our last Presidential candidate to win the working class vote. We still have tons of working class voters, more than we have college educated, but Republicans have more.

Analysts look closely at the most accurate demographic information they can find, and they discuss it with Rho Khanna, Michael Bennett, Gavin Newsom, Chris Murphy, and anyone else who will listen, all the 28 hopefuls. Sanders doesn't need to be told, he knows these things in his bones.

If I can suggest one thing I'd suggest listening to David Shor's interview with Ezra Klein. Shor was an analyst for the Biden, then Harris campaign, he is a committed Democrat. Shor doesn't give bad news for fun, nor to cause despair, we need to get it together as a party. We'll win the midterms, we'll flip the house, but long term things look bad for the senate and the presidency, and the house during presidential years could be a problem.

We don't need to adopt more centrist positions, or more Republican positions, we need to go to where the American people are at.

usonian

(16,850 posts)
5. Yes, if the party picks up on the messages and wild response to Bernie Sanders and AOC.
Tue Apr 1, 2025, 09:19 PM
Tuesday

Others are deeply in debt to wealthy interests.

May I suggest something a bit more direct?



Actually, the party could just steal my FAFO flags!
They are creative commons licensed, so
GO FOR IT

https://www.democraticunderground.com/100219770873

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