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March 2025 Liberals & Democrats
They Just Don’t Get It
Washington Commentary
by Matthew Continetti
At the Democratic National Committee’s winter meeting in Maryland last
month, the Democrats elected Ken Martin as their new chair and David
Hogg as vice chair. Hogg is 24 years old and appears healthy, which
means he has decades ahead to contemplate the wreck of his party.
And a wreck it is. The Democratic Party is leaderless, adrift, and
unpopular.
It’s also deeply confused. With some notable exceptions—my AEI colleague
Ruy Teixeira, Wall Street Journal columnist William Galston, political
consultant James Carville—Democrats not only find it impossible to agree
on why they are in such a hole; many deny they are in a hole.
The denialists live in an alternate universe. Joe Biden left office with
an approval rating of 39 percent, according to the RealClearPolitics
polling average. His average job approval in the Gallup poll was 42
percent, the second-lowest rating among presidents since JFK. A separate
Gallup poll found that most Americans believe that under Biden the
country lost ground on debt, immigration, inequality, the economy, world
affairs, and crime. Not much else is left.
Donald Trump defeated Harris 50 percent to 48 percent nationwide and won
every swing state. Practically the entire country shifted right between
2020 and 2024. The DNC is just about the only political institution
Democrats still control. Trump’s Republicans hold the presidency,
Congress, most Supreme Court appointments, and most governorships and
state legislatures.
The GOP’s strength is historic. For the third straight year, Republicans
began 2025 with a slight edge in party registration. More registered
Republicans than registered Democrats voted in 2024. That hasn’t
happened since 1928, when Herbert Hoover faced Al Smith.
The Democrats’ polls are dismal, too. According to CNN, 48 percent of
Americans hold an unfavorable view of the Democrats. According to
Quinnipiac, that number is 57 percent. YouGov’s tracking poll puts
Democratic un-favorables at 59 percent.
Yet numbers don’t capture the full extent of the problem. Democratic
elites are doubling down on identity politics at precisely the moment
when the public is telling them to stop.
Take Ken Martin. “We’ve got the right message,” the new chair says in
the New York Times. “What we need to do is connect it back with voters.”
I don’t know what message Martin is talking about, but it’s not what
voters are hearing. During the week he was elected chair, the Times
released a devastating survey of attitudes toward the major parties. If
you are a Democrat, it reads like an indictment.
The poll asked Americans to name Democratic party priorities. Voters
replied that the Democrats stand for abortion rights and LGBTQ rights,
and oppose climate change—which is a fair summary of what Democratic
elected officials and their media chorus talk about daily.
Yet Americans have different concerns. Their top issues are the economy,
health care, and immigration. The Democrats’ fixations hardly register.
In fact, voter priorities align more closely with Republican positions.
The GOP, Americans said, stands for controlling immigration, improving
the economy, and lowering taxes. This overlap between public sentiment
and Republican stands explains the GOP majority.
Republicans haven’t been this in sync with the public in a generation.
While Democrats inside the MSNBC bubble gabbed about pronouns,
Republicans appealed to working- and middle-class Americans struggling
with high prices and interest rates.
Americans agree with Democrats on exactly one topic: health care. But
voters don’t see Democrats as emphasizing health care as much as climate
change and sexual identity. For voters, health care is about insurance
access and cost. For Democrats, health care is subsumed into abstract
crusades for democracy, minority rights, transgenderism, and the
green-energy transition. The Democrats consider public safety and the
cost of living to be trifles by comparison.
Denial, litmus tests, and bizarre ideas define today’s Democratic Party.
The Biden administration said illegal immigration would be seasonal,
inflation temporary, and the world safer after the Afghanistan disaster.
When voters registered their disapproval, the administration said these
poor saps had fallen prey to misinformation.
The White House said Biden was fit as a fiddle—until he withdrew from
the race. The Harris campaign said America was feeling the joy—but she
wouldn’t face Joe Rogan. Democrats spent $175 million on pro-choice
advertising—yet had no answer when Trump’s campaign hammered Harris’s
support for sex-change surgeries for illegal immigrants in prison.
Rather than face facts, Democrats have retreated into the protective
shell of Bluesky. They blame setbacks on voter backwardness. They pin
responsibility on anyone but themselves. At a Georgetown forum on
January 30, MSNBC personality Jonathan Capehart asked DNC candidates if
they believed racism and misogyny had played a part in Kamala Harris’s
defeat. Everyone raised their hands. “That’s good,” Capehart purred.
“You all pass.”
The DNC meeting showcased this flight from reality. It opened with a
land acknowledgment. There was an extended debate over whether
proportional representation required electing nonbinary candidates.
While votes were tallied, delegates boogied to the Cupid Shuffle.
The choice was telling. The Cupid Shuffle is 18 years old. Far from the
electric movements of Bill Clinton and Barack Obama, today’s Democratic
Party is the party of the establishment, of people who are comfortable,
of a dance played only at bar mitzvahs. It’s become the party of rule
makers and scolds. It’s for people who think James Taylor is edgy.
Worse, it’s the party of Joe Biden. In the past century, four presidents
served single terms: Herbert Hoover, Jimmy Carter, George H.W. Bush, and
Biden. Hoover’s and Carter’s failures launched eras of opposition
dominance. Bush’s legacy is more complicated, since Republicans won
Congress in 1994 and the White House in 2000. Still, the GOP won the
popular vote just once between 1988 and 2024.
We could be entering a similar period in which Biden’s unpopularity
haunts the Democrats for multiple election cycles. To prevent this,
Democrats will have to do more than hope for a public backlash to Trump
overreach. They will have to find leaders who reject both the Biden
record and the politically correct progressive utopianism that shaped it.
Successful presidential candidates typically run against their own
parties. The way to demonstrate your capacity to lead the country is by
challenging party orthodoxy. Parties benefit from such bouts of creative
destruction. Ronald Reagan fought the Nixon-Kissinger-Bush consensus on
economics and foreign policy. Bill Clinton campaigned as a “New
Democrat” who would end welfare as we knew it, mend affirmative action,
fight crime, and support free trade.
George W. Bush ran as a “compassionate conservative” distinct from Newt
Gingrich’s revolutionaries. Barack Obama felled the Clinton dynasty
thanks in part to his early opposition to the Iraq War. And Donald Trump
overthrew the GOP of Bush, John McCain, and Mitt Romney by calling for a
border wall, economic nationalism, and America First foreign policy.
By this logic, Democrats will be on track when they elevate figures who
talk less about racial, sexual, and gender identity and climate
apocalypse, and more about incomes, immigration, and national greatness.
But don’t expect it to happen soon. As I write, the 2028 Democratic
front-runner is Kamala Harris. She enjoys a double-digit lead over her
closest rivals. The DNC reacted—yes—joyfully when she appeared by video.
Which tells you everything about a party that just doesn’t get it.
Photo: AP Photo/Rod Lamkey, Jr.
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