Tag: ken martin
What Went Wrong For Democrats In 2024 -- And What Must Go Right Next Time

What Went Wrong For Democrats In 2024 -- And What Must Go Right Next Time

For months now, Democrats argued about whether to release the "autopsy" the National Committee commissioned on what went wrong in 2024. The report was completed but then not released; under pressure, Democratic National Committee Chairman Ken Martin released the report late last week, but only with the caveat that it didn't meet the Committee's standards, whatever that means.

In truth, the report finds plenty of blame. That's the problem with losing a close election — and 2024, no matter how many times President Donald Trump describes it as a landslide, it wasn't — is that almost everything you did "wrong" could have made the difference. Which doesn't necessarily tell you what to do right, the next time around, or address the very real divides inside the Democratic Party.

The report faults almost everyone. The Biden White House is faulted for not doing enough during the first term and the 2022 midterms to prepare Kamala Harris to lead the ticket, which, of course, would not have mattered so much had former President Joe Biden not waited so long to decide not to run, but that's another story.The Harris campaign is faulted for writing off rural voters, relying too much on identity politics and not being tough enough on Trump. When the other side runs a negative campaign and wins, as Trump did here, the response is always that you should have hit back harder. With what, is the question.

One of the most striking conclusions and the most troubling is about the efficacy of the ad Trump ran attacking Harris on transgender issues — in this case, on her previous statement of support for taxpayer-funded gender-affirming surgeries for prison inmates.

The report cites the ad as "very effective," and says that internal pollsters believed that "if the Vice President would not change her position — and she did not — then there was nothing which would have worked as a response."Are Democrats in fact too far out front of voters on transgender issues?

Do Democrats rely too much on identity politics, an argument that works better with the base of the Democratic party than it does with more moderate, independent voters, whom they need to attract?

According to the report, "Harris wrote off rural America, assuming urban/suburban margins would compensate. The math doesn't work ... You can't lose rural areas by overwhelming margins and make it up elsewhere when rural voters are a significant share of the electorate. If Democrats are to reclaim leadership in the Heartland or the South, candidates must perform well in rural turf. Show up, listen and then do it again."

As for male voters, the report argues that "Male voters require direct engagement. The gender gap can be narrowed. Deploy male messengers, address economic concerns and don't assume identity politics will hold male voters of color."

The release of the autopsy and all the discussion about why it took so long to release it coincides with a new New York Times/Siena College poll showing Democrats with a strong advantage going into the midterms, but also with deep divides and disillusionment within the party. While the left is the loudest force on the Democratic side, it may not be the most popular: a majority of Democratic supporters said that they were generally happy with the party's ideological positioning, but 52 percent said the next Democratic presidential candidate should move the party to the center in order to win. Only a quarter said the next candidate should move the party to the left.

The Times found that more than half of Democrats and Democratic-leaning independents expressed frustration with the party: "unhappiness spanned almost every part of the party's coalition — including young, white, Black and college-educated voters — and was especially strong among Democrats least attached to the party, who are the most likely to swing elections."

The real issue for Democrats is not why they lost the last election, but how they are going to avoid losing the next one.

Susan Estrich is a celebrated feminist legal scholar, the first female president of the Harvard Law Review, and the first woman to run a U.S. presidential campaign. She has written eight books.

Ken Martin DNC Chair

New DNC Chair: Democrats Are 'Alive And Kicking' And Ready To Fight

Newly elected Democratic National Committee Chair Ken Martin appeared on MSNBC’s “The Rachel Maddow Show” on Monday to discuss what Democrats can do, as Maddow put it, “to mitigate some of the harm that’s being caused” by Donald Trump and his administration.

Martin pointed to the Democrats’ swift and vocal response earlier Monday to Trump henchman Elon Musk’s power grab and dismantling of the U.S. Agency for International Development, known as USAID, which helps foreign countries battle hunger, poverty, and epidemics. Democratic members of Congress held a press conference at the agency’s headquarters and joined protesters trying to gain access to the building.

Although Democrats don’t currently control any branch of government, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries laid out a 10-point plan to combat Republicans every step of the way.

Martin said similar actions and communications will be a key strategy, pitching a “war room” to combat the tidal wave of misinformation Trump and his minions are unleashing thanks to the right’s growing control over social media platforms.

“I think for the Democratic Party, these first 100 days, we have to do a few things,” he said. “One is, we have to stand up the war room, which is to make sure we’re stamping out the misinformation and disinformation campaign of the Republican Party and that we are also at the same time defining ourselves.”

He stressed that Democrats are not only “not dead” but are principled and ready to fight the MAGA movement.

“I remember in 2016 someone saying that Republicans are shameless, but the Democrats are spineless. And so it’s important for folks to know we have a spine,” Martin said. “We’re not dead as a party; we’re still alive and kicking, and we’re gonna fight for our values, and we’re gonna fight for American values.”


DNC Chair @kenmartin.bsky.social was on MSNBC last night, calling Democrats to stamp out disinformation and show Americans we are fighting for them.

[image or embed]
— The Democrats (@democrats.org) February 4, 2025 at 11:36 AM

Martin, the former chair of the Minnesota Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party, was elected to lead the DNC on Saturday with 246 votes out of 448. He succeeds Jaime Harrison, who served as the party’s leader since 2021.

During his acceptance speech, Martin laid out a three-pronged plan for the party in the Trump 2.0 era.

“First is to unite. We have to rebuild our coalition,” Martin said. “Second, we need to go on offense. Trump's first weeks have shown us what happens when amateur hour meets demolition derby."

The new party leader then aims to get down to brass tacks.

“Third, we’re going to take tonight to enjoy the moment, and we’re gonna build new alliances, but then we’re going to get to work” and “fight for working people again in this party,” he said

Martin isn’t alone in the fight.

Jeffries’ 10-point plan for Democrats includes pushing back against efforts to end Medicaid, preventing unlawful access to the Treasury payment system by Musk and his minions, and highlighting how Trump’s policies are raising costs for Americans, to name a few.

Democratic governors like California’s Gavin Newsom, Colorado’s Jared Polis, Illinois’ J.B. Pritzker, and New Mexico’s Michelle Lujan Grisham have also been vocal about opposing the Trump administration. Before Trump took office, Polis and Pritzker spearheaded Governors Safeguarding Democracy, a new national alliance allowing the leaders to share information and resources across state lines.

Democratic attorneys general are pulling their weight by coming together in a multistate coalition to file numerous lawsuits against Trump’s “reckless, dangerous, illegal, and unconstitutional” executive orders on his federal funding freeze, birthright citizenship ban, and the Justice Department’s directive to prosecute state and city officials who don’t adhere to his mass deportation agenda.

Post-election data from Gallup revealed that the economy was the most crucial issue for voters in 2024—the highest since the Great Recession in 2008. Martin, a Midwesterner from a working-class background, says it’s the “honor of my life” to be tasked with getting Democrats back on their feet after their election disappointment and direct the party back to its working-class, New Deal roots.

“The Democratic Party is the party of working people, and it’s time to roll up our sleeves and outcompete everywhere, in every election, and at every level of government—and I look forward to working with this next generation of leadership to build a Party to unite America,” Martin said.

Reprinted with permission from Daily Kos

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