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Political Strategy for a Permanent Democratic Majority

Teixeira: The Big Tent is Overrated

The following article, “The Big Tent Is Overrated by Ruy Teixeira, politics editor of The Liberal Patriot newsletter, senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute and author of major works of political analysis, is cross-posted from The Liberal Patriot:

Democrats are famously in very poor shape these days. Despite the unpopularity of many of Donald Trump’s specific moves, Democrats’ popularity has not been rising. Indeed, in many polls it is mired at historic lows. Democrats’ lead in the generic congressional ballot for 2026 is alarmingly modest and the situation in the Senate is dire. And no, the Democrats’ strong showing in the idiosyncratic 2025 elections, boosted by favorable terrain, disapproval of the incumbent Trump administration, and their now-traditional advantage in lower turnout elections where their educated, engaged supporters flock to the polls, does not change these fundamental problems.

The Democrats’ current woes come on top of their decisive defeat in the 2024 election and the restoration of their nemesis, Trump, to power. Democrats as a result are at their wits’ end. They know they need to do something…but what? Many in the party want to fight, fight, fight. Hence the government shutdown and the unending stream of denunciations of each and every move Trump makes. But logically such truculence will do—and has done—nothing to change the party’s toxic image among wide sectors of working class and red-state voters the party desperately needs to turn around their electoral fortunes.

For such voters, the Democrats are out-of-step with their preferences on everything from crime and immigration to trans issues to patriotism and even the economy. They neither like nor trust the Democrats and, not without reason, feel Democrats view anyone who doesn’t share their priorities and blanket opposition to Trump as a hopeless reactionary if not an enabler of fascism. In short, they believe Democrats look down on them as the “deplorables” who must be “educated” by their betters to see the world correctly.

This doesn’t play well with these voters and why should it? Even if they are dissatisfied with Trump in some ways, they will naturally be reluctant to sign up with a party they perceive as denigrating them and their values. This reality has not escaped the notice of all Democrats; electorally realistic centrists and even some liberals have realized that the Democrats’ cause is fatally undermined in many areas of the country by this perception. The solution they seem to be gravitating toward is “the big tent.”

The theory here is that the Democrats’ problems stem not from the overall or dominant views within the party but rather from a lack of tolerance for those who dissent from party orthodoxy. To run successfully in more conservative districts and states, Democratic candidates must be able to adopt positions that fit these areas better without being read the riot act by their fellow Democrats.

At the margin, that would certainly be helpful. But would that really solve the fundamental image problem that bedevils the Democrats? We live in an era where politics is highly nationalized and voters’ views of local candidates are heavily influenced by these voters’ views of the party those candidates are affiliated with. Hence the decline of split ticket voting and the very high correlation between the partisan vote for president in a state/district and that for every other federal office. Candidates have a very hard time escaping the gravitational pull of their own national party.

This dramatically undercuts the payoff from a “big tent” approach. A Democrat in a conservative area can deviate from the party orthodoxy on, say, trans issues but—even if local Democratic activists and progressive commentators grit their teeth and don’t attack that candidate (difficult!)—voters in that area still see the D by the candidate’s name. They know the candidate’s party still thinks that transwomen are women, that biological boys should be able to play girls sports, that “gender-affirming” medical treatments for children are a great idea and should be easily available and that to question these ideas is to be on the wrong side of history itself.

In other words, voters will still know who’s running the tent even if Democrats let a few of the heterodox inside. This is especially the case since the welcoming mat for dissenters in the party has been mostly rolled out for progressive left heroes like Zohran Mamdani, the newly-elected democratic socialist mayor of New York City, whose unorthodox positions on economic issues are forgiven, even as his profile on social and cultural issues simply deepens the problems with the party’s national image. The tent opens on the left, much less so on the right.

There’s a nice illustration of this in the recent Ezra Klein interview with Ta-Nehisi Coates. Klein has been beating the drums for the big tent approach. He ventures the following to Coates, in the process of trying to desperately convince him of the political necessity of Democratic big tent politics:

[A] huge amount of the country, a majority of the country, believes things about trans people, about what policy should be toward trans people, about what language is acceptable to trans people, that we would see as fundamentally and morally wrong…what politically…should our relationship with those people be?

Unsurprisingly, Coates doesn’t take this and the many other hints dropped by Klein about reaching those who dissent from liberal orthodoxy. As far as Coates is concerned all these people are on the other side of a line that must be drawn between those with the correct views and those who lack them: “If you think it is OK to dehumanize people, then conversation between you and me is probably not possible,” he remarks.

But even more interesting is how Klein frames the question: those who don’t share his (and Coates’ and the general Democratic) view on trans issues are “fundamentally and morally wrong”. This language by Klein makes it clear that his idea of the big tent is that some Democrats, especially candidates running in more conservative areas, should be permitted to have wrong, immoral positions on various issues so as to entice the benighted voters in those areas to vote for Democrats—or, as Matt Yglesias has put it, to allow “bigots in the tent.” But the positions of the party on those issues will and should remain the same. You can come into the tent but the left will still be running the show.

This won’t work and, no, talking about the affordability crisis and the cost-of-living will not induce these voters to forget what the party actually stands for. Instead, advocates for a big tent need to face the facts: the party’s many unpopular and unworkable positions have to genuinely change to reach the voters they want to reach. Otherwise, holding their nose and letting a few candidates deviate from party orthodoxy will have little effect.

Another example: immigration. Democrats have had little to say about Trump’s successful efforts to close the southern border but much to say about his deportation efforts which are viewed as, well, wrong and immoral. That doesn’t add up to a change in party position, as Josh Barro points out:

To start to win back voters’ trust, the party must acknowledge that the Biden administrations policy of laxity was a failure, and commit credibly to better enforcement—not only by preventing illegal border crossings and closing the loopholes in the asylum system, but also by enforcing immigration law in the interior of the country, by deporting people who weren’t supposed to come here during Biden’s term…If Democrats are only seen talking about how the government is doing too much enforcement, we’ll be seen as the anti-enforcement party, and that’s politically deadly.

And of course that’s exactly what’s happening. The Democrats do indeed seem like the anti-enforcement party that doesn’t want to deport anybody. That image means that a Democrat running in a conservative area can try to carve out a tough-on-illegal-immigration profile but—even assuming the activists leave him or her alone—the party’s overall stance on immigration enforcement will mostly negate any benefit from the candidate’s heterodox position.

One more example: climate. Trump has blown up the Democrats’ climate program by canceling or cutting back much of the IRA with remarkably little public protest. Democrats are starting to realize their net-zero, Green New Deal-type plans are out of step with both the physical realities of America’s thirst for energy in the age of AI andwhat American voters actually want from their energy system—chiefly low costs and high reliability. Their grand plans just didn’t and don’t have much support, outside of professional class liberals and climate NGOs. A recent Politico article reported on the vibe shift:

“There’s no way around it: The left strategy on climate needs to be rethought,” said Jody Freeman, who served as counselor for energy and climate change in President Barack Obama’s White House. “We’ve lost the culture war on climate, and we have to figure out a way for it to not be a niche leftist movement.”

It’s a strategy Freeman admitted she was “struggling” to articulate, but one that included using natural gas as a “bridge fuel” to more renewable power—an approach Democrats embraced during the Obama administration—finding “a new approach” for easing permits for energy infrastructure and building broad-based political support.

But if a Democratic candidate running in a conservative area responded to this vibe shift by saying that climate change is a problem, not an immediate crisis, that net zero is not practical as a near-term goal, and that fossil fuels will be in the energy mix for a very long time that would run smack dab into the overarching Democratic commitment to large-scale action on climate change. So even if the climate NGOs and activists left such a candidate alone, the candidate would still be linked to a party that sees his or her views as fundamentally wrong and immoral, fit only to be retailed among the rubes in flyover country.

There’s no way around it. The big tent is less important than who’s running the tent. Until and unless overall Democratic positions change and voters are convinced sensible people are in charge of the tent, a few more heterodox Democrats running in conservative areas will do little to change the party’s trajectory.

4 comments on “Teixeira: The Big Tent is Overrated

  1. Ted Kessler on

    “Despite the unpopularity of many of Donald Trump’s specific moves, Democrats’ popularity has not been rising. ”

    Why? Not because of Democrats’ policy positions. It’s because they’re not seen as fighting back enough. Otherwise how do you explain the resounding victories in every election this November? Even in Mississippi! 99.8% of the counties that had elections shifted blue compared to the 2024 presidential results. Look at the dramatic shifts in heavily Hispanic communities. Plenty of working class folks there. The poor popularity of Democrats is somehow not impeding their electoral popularity.

    “The Democrats’ current woes come on top of their decisive defeat in the 2024 election”

    I’m getting tired of this canard. Trump did not get a majority of the popular vote. Beat Harris by 1.5%, who did much better than incumbents in international races who were with almost no exceptions voted out of office. Democrats gained a net 1 seat in the House and a net loss of -6 in the Senate. How can that in any spin of the English language be a “decisive defeat”?

    Reply
  2. Eric Ellsworth on

    Texeira has gotten a little over his skis on the cultural stuff. The original case that the public found Democrats culture war focus off-putting and out-of-touch was a good one, and buttressed by a lot of data.

    But the next step of arguing that these same voters are so motivated against the Democratic party as to reject any Democrat purely on dislike of national party politics is pretty tenuous stuff.
    There’s just not a lot of evidence that voters have this deep-seated dislike of progressive politics. It’s just as likely that view is coming form Texeira’s own distaste for some of the more annoying aspects of progressive orthodoxy and virtue signaling, combined with his current residence at AEI.

    There IS evidence that Trump’s coalition is coming apart, and suggestions that Latinos are willing to give (some) Dems a chance when they talk about affordability.

    And he’s also not addressing serious problems on the R side, from whether any post-Trump politician can successfully hold that coalition together, to the Epstein stuff which can potentially vitiate a lot of the anti-establishment vibe of the alt-right, to the blatant disinterest of the Republicans in the economic well-being of an awful lot of voters. And that’s without factoring in a recession, which seems at least reasonably likely in the next year or two (especially if you believe the estimates that without AI datacenter spending GDP growth is at 0.1%).

    That’s not to say that Dems’s problem are all of a sudden gone, or that he’s wrong that the current progressive “big tent” is unappealing to many voters.

    But there are a lot of factors which don’t fit into Teixeira’s anti-“big tent” theory, and these are probably the more important ones for understanding the electoral landscape.

    Reply
  3. William Benjamin Bankston on

    Hold on there a minute? For years and years up until last week, Teixeira believed that base mobilization was a myth.

    https://www.liberalpatriot.com/p/turnout-myths-are-the-democrats-drug

    What changed his mind? Probably the same thing that changed his mind on immigration, public assistance, crime, etc., etc.: convenience.

    But enough low-hanging fruit. Teixeira does remember that in 2021, Republicans won that race in Virginia and nearly did the same in New Jersey, doesn’t he? So, don’t try to cast those blowouts as automatic on account to MAGAs saying home in non-presidential elections. Which, by the way, next year’s midterm elections are.

    And for the broader point he’s making, look up how the Republican party was polling in the red wave years of 2010 and 2014. It wasn’t pretty except in what counted.

    “Oppositions don’t win elections; governments lose them.” – Winston Churchill.

    Reply
    • Ted Kessler on

      The problem with Texeira’s columns is that he starts with his desired conclusion, then attempts to back it up with biased sources, and the twisting of facts and polling, including outright distortions and delusional interpretations. This strategy is easily infected with confirmation bias.

      Reply

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