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The Democratic Strategist

Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Dems Now More Progressive on Economic Issues

The following article stub for “Democrats Keep Misreading the Working Class: Many in the party see workers as drifting rightward. But new data show they’re more progressive than ever on economic issues—if Democrats are willing to meet them there” by Bhaskar Sunkara, is cross-posted from The Nation:

“Zohran Mamdani won New York’s Democratic mayoral nomination with the most votes ever for a primary winner in the city. The democratic socialist did so with an agenda that spoke to the kitchen-table economic issues that, following the debacle of the 2024 election, Democrats generally acknowledge they have to get better at discussing. So what was the reaction of party leaders and the media echo chamber? A meltdown so severe that it has sparked widespread talk of a “civil war” within the party. On one side, the line goes, are younger, highly educated, pro-­Palestinian progressives who embrace economic populism; on the other, older Democratic stalwarts who are pro-Israel, economically moderate, in tune with the working class, and cautious about rocking the boat. But that’s not what the numbers say.

Advisers to House minority leader Hakeem Jeffries—who, like his counterpart in the Senate, Chuck Schumer, resisted endorsing Mamdani after the primary—referred to the city’s rising wave of democratic-­socialist-backed candidates as “Team Gentrification.” Yet exit polls reveal a different reality: Mamdani attracted support from a broad swath of New Yorkers by running a campaign relentlessly focused on working-­class cost-of-living concerns.

Unfortunately, top Democrats refuse to accept the notion that Mamdani’s economic populism is the key to his success. Or that the appeal of a boisterous tax-the-rich message might extend beyond urban progressive enclaves. Some go as far as Michigan Senator Elissa Slotkin, who says that Democrats need to stop demonizing rich people. But a recent report by the Center for Working-Class Politics(CWCP) upends Slotkin’s assertion. Analyzing data from three long-running national surveys, the report shows that working-class Americans have grown more progressive over the past two decades—not just on economic justice but also on immigration and civil rights. Today’s working class stands farther to the left than when it helped elect Barack Obama in 2008.

Why, then, do so many high-ranking Democrats imagine that workers are reactionary? Because the middle and upper classes are moving leftward at a faster pace, creating a perception gap. As higher-­income, college-educated voters embrace progressive positions on climate change, LGBTQ rights, and other issues, working-class voters—despite their own leftward shift—appear comparatively conservative. This distorted narrative misleads Democratic strategists and journalists alike.

Read more here.

7 comments on “Dems Now More Progressive on Economic Issues

  1. Victor on

    Democrats are unwilling to make philosophic or ideological arguments for taxing the rich or regulating corporations.

    Technocratic arguments only drive the non-college educated further into right wing frameworks.

    Bernie Sanders is still basically alone in saying that greed is a moral, psychological and democracy threatening problem.

    One reads the press and sees billionaires aligning with Trump, cowering to him or staying in silence in light of further and further autocratic drift and the media still says that it is just because they are afraid.

    Historically the rich never supported democracy and further in history they didn’t support the rule of law either.

    This has been the case in every country that has become or stayed autocratic and in every historical period.

    Is this argument really that hard to make?

    Reply
  2. William Benjamin Bankston on

    It is absolutely true that the center is dying, despite the best efforts of a lot of pundits. It’s what the trend of congressional elections have been for a quarter-century now.

    However, the predominance of economic issues so strongly believed by democratic socialists is probably not true either. Jeremy Corbyn in the UK, Martin Schulz in Germany, and Jean-Luc Melencon in France all lost multiple elections. The reason is because culture wars are culture wars, not a misdirecting desire for a modern-day Franklin Roosevelt or Clement Attlee.

    Reply
    • Victor on

      How do the culture wars become so predominant in the first place?

      In the past you have focused on the Civil Rights Act.

      But LBJ was popular with his War on Poverty until the Vietnam War escalated.

      Reply
      • William Benjamin Bankston on

        House Republicans gained several Southern seats in 1964, one of the worst ever elections for their party overall. If JFK hadn’t been killed and the Republicans had nominated someone acceptable to both their conservative and semi-progressive wings, and that had been a semi-competitive race, you can be sure their Southern gains would’ve been huge.

        The hippies weren’t a thing yet and the war in Vietnam hadn’t begun to go wrong. It was civil rights.

        Reply
        • Victor on

          Too many ifs.

          Yes there was a backlash to civil rights, but the backlash to riots was actually more important and they aren’t the same.

          Just like there was actual support for Black Lives Matter and then it all went away once the rioting started.

          Reply
          • William Benjamin Bankston on

            The problem with that is that the white supremacist assaults on the Southern black pacifistic protesters in the 1960’s should logically have created their own neutralizing backlash. They didn’t.

          • Victor on

            The backlash was the undeniable short and long term success of the Civil Rights movement (with the exception of affirmative action).

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