We all remember the one about demographics: how inevitable Democrat victories would come about from coalitions of minority voters. We were told that the Democrats would run the country for generations, according to the experts.
Well, we know how that one turned out! The House flipped in 2010. The U.S. Senate flipped in 2014. Lots of state legislatures turned, too. And the presidency flipped in 2016.
This is from their recent op-ed about the short-term future of the party:
As chair and deputy chair of the DNC, we are committed to ensuring that our party is inclusive, forward-looking and bold in prescribing an alternative to President Donald Trump’s destructive policies and his politics of divisiveness and deception.
We know Democrats can win big in 2018 and 2020, just as we did this year in New Jersey, Virginia and across the country – but we know we can only do that by rebuilding trust with those who share our progressive vision for America and by addressing concerns many have raised in recent years.
Democrats can win big if we’re united, and we know that can only happen by healing divisions that still linger from last year’s bruising presidential nominating contest.
Let me agree that unity is always important. We could use a little unity on our side, too. Let me also agree that the Democrats did well in Virginia because of the federal employees who have turned that state around.
Let me disagree as well. The Democrats do not have a unity problem, because they agree on most things.
Let me take you back to their convention. Did you hear a prime-time speaker promoting pro-life values or marriage? On the contrary, the convention was nothing but a certification of what they believe with little if any disagreement.
The party’s problem is that it can’t connect with people who don’t live in cities or go to church regularly. We have seen article after article since the election stating the same message. This is from Kim Moody:
To be sure, Clinton won the popular vote nationally, perhaps as John Nichols gloated in the Nation by an “unprecedented” margin that might run as high as two million or more.
The problem is that 1.5 million of that can be accounted for from Clinton’s margin over Trump in New York City alone.
The majorities in the coastal states of California and New York by themselves account for more than her net majority; the rest of the country continues to see its Democratic vote stagnate or decline.
My message to Tom and Keith is that there is a lot more to a Democrat comeback than unity. They need to connect with the voters who were turned off by President Obama’s policies. And there are lots of those voters living between the coasts!
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