this post was submitted on 29 May 2025
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We're back at the "GOP and Dems have a different core demographic". There's not a massive as-of-yet-untapped tribalist voting bloc waiting for the DNC to ratchet up their rhetoric.
I agree entirely. Like I said, the strategy, or lack thereof, of the Dems is a contributor to this entire debacle.
I think you vastly overestimate the appetite and appeal of conflict for most American voters at this point in time. We run in extremely left-leaning circles here in Lemmy, but while there's general dissatisfaction with the Dem party, a majority of voters want it to stay the course or become more moderate rather than radicalize. And while that's pig-fucking stupidity, it's... well, we play the hand we're dealt, not the one we want.
My point about abandoning the long-standing pandering to suburban professionals and other unplugged moderates who crave civility politics wasn't an endorsement of the Dems continuing the 'adult in the room' strategy, only suggesting that there are definite and serious electoral costs to changing the strategy, and that prior experience does not engender confidence in harnessing the 'anger' of other Dem demographics as a means of increasing electoral success.
Changing the strategy means telling the Dems, as a whole, 'the party doesn't need the support of the suburban middle class; progressives will make up the difference'.
And while I agree that attempting to further shore up the suburban middle class is clearly not a winning fucking strategy, progressives - even for progressive darlings like Sanders - simply do not command the votes necessary to change the electoral balance in this country, as things currently stand. It goes back to the core point I made - that the fundamental problem is we lack a clear 'winning coalition' more than that we lack a winning strategy (though we do also, clearly, lack a winning strategy as well). There's no strategic silver bullet that the DNC is just 'missing', or too corrupt to adopt. We're in a bad fucking position, and changing the electorate is probably more useful than changing strategy (though there's nothing stopping us from agitating for both, I feel it's important to emphasize that changing strategy alone is not going to be anything but kicking the can down the road - I remember the triumphalism of the successful strategy of the Obama years and how that fucking panned out)