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FakeNoose

(42,198 posts)
Fri May 8, 2026, 06:59 AM 2 hrs ago

Robert Reich: Meet the Future of the Democratic Party



Link: https://robertreich.substack.com/p/heres-how-democrats-are-responding

Last Thursday, populist Democratic candidate Graham Platner shook up the Democratic establishment when his primary competitor, Maine Governor Janet Mills, suspended her Senate campaign amid polls showing her badly trailing Platner, an oyster farmer who had come out of nowhere to win a national following.

Platner is the latest example of the rise of anti-establishment outsiders in the Democratic Party — a trend that also includes self-proclaimed democratic socialist Zohran Mamdani, who last year defeated former Gov. Andrew Cuomo for New York City mayor.

Yet the Democratic establishment — corporate Democrats, wealthy Democratic donors, entrenched Washington “centrists,” the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, the Democratic National Committee, and Hakeem Jeffries and Chuck Schumer — still don’t get it.

Hell, the Democratic establishment didn’t get it a decade ago when Hillary Clinton was the presumptive Democratic nominee (and, not incidentally, Jeb Bush was considered a shoe-in for the Republican nomination).

I remember interviewing voters about their political preferences in the late spring of 2015, in the Rust Belt, Midwest, and South, for a book I was then writing. When I asked them whom they wanted for president, they kept telling me Bernie Sanders or Donald Trump. Often the same individuals offered both names. They explained they wanted an “outsider,” someone who would “shake up” the system, ideally a person who wasn’t even a Democrat or a Republican.

The people I met were furious with their employers, with the federal government, and with Wall Street. They were irate that they hadn’t been able to save for their retirements, indignant that their children weren’t doing any better than they had at their children’s age, and enraged at those at the top. Several had lost jobs, savings, or homes in the financial crisis or the Great Recession that followed it.

They kept reiterating that the system was “rigged” in favor of the powerful and against themselves. They didn’t oppose government per se; most favored additional spending on Social Security, Medicare, education, and roads and bridges. But they hated “crony capitalism” — large corporations using their political clout to gain special favors and changes in laws that often hurt average people.

... Something very big was happening in America: a full-scale rebellion against the political establishment. ... The Democratic establishment still doesn’t see the groundswell — or is actively fighting it.
- more at link -

Robert Reich makes some very important points here, how the Democratic Party has been losing touch with voters over the past 10 years. This has to change because we can't allow the American voters to elect any more Chumps as a result.

Please read the rest on Robert Reich's substack. (OP link.)

8 replies = new reply since forum marked as read
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bucolic_frolic

(55,684 posts)
1. Reagan's election began this trend of shoveling money UP the income scale.
Fri May 8, 2026, 07:29 AM
2 hrs ago

Reagan enacted IRA's and a trend toward self-responsibility, but that eroded existing safety net programs public and private. Within 10 years pensions were flagging, defined benefit plans ending. The middle class was hollowed out and corporations and wealthy portfolios were the beneficiaries. Meanwhile politics became about money that resulted in Citizens United. The GOP had a plan, Democrats trudged along for the working part of the population.

We need to tap MAGA anger. MAGA loyalty to Trump is emotional and soft on context or issues.

Even if we can grab independents and some part of MAGA, how do you run a party without adequate money? We depend on corporate donations. I will say social issues were never a good bet. We didn't stand on civil rights broadly, we used specific issues and got tarred and feathered with them.

FakeNoose

(42,198 posts)
4. "Big money" always backs a safe media star
Fri May 8, 2026, 08:12 AM
1 hr ago

That's what we learned with Reagan ... they like the guys who are willing to follow the script and not think too hard.

RainCaster

(13,852 posts)
7. Reagan wasn't the first
Fri May 8, 2026, 09:04 AM
29 min ago

Eisenhower installed the Shah in Iran, overthrowing a legitimate elected leader. All for the benefit of Big Oil.

multigraincracker

(37,957 posts)
2. Add Dr Abdul for Senator in Michigan.
Fri May 8, 2026, 07:40 AM
1 hr ago

He seems to be taking off in Michigan
Doesn’t take one penny from big business.

gab13by13

(32,648 posts)
3. I have been saying for a very long time that Democrats should nominate a non-politician for president in 2028
Fri May 8, 2026, 08:03 AM
1 hr ago

Orban lost because his opponent was anti-government, because he was a fighter who promised to support the working class.

Hungary didn't throw out Orban because he was a dictator, Hungary threw out Orban because someone ran against him who promised to fight for unwashed Hungarians.

When I see so many articles that claim that the GOP knows that it is going to lose the midterms, I shudder. The Schumer strategy that Krasnov will burn it all down and then people will vote for Democrats is a bad strategy.

Miles Taylor - Malcolm Nance - 2028. There will be no fights between moderate and progressive Democrats. Nominate fighters.

PatSeg

(53,409 posts)
8. I'm not so sure about that though
Fri May 8, 2026, 09:31 AM
1 min ago

A "non-politician for president" didn't work out so well for republicans or for the country. Some of our best leaders over the years have been politicians. Clearly some politicians are better than others.

NNadir

(38,435 posts)
5. I'm not entirely sure Platner won't be another Fetterman but...
Fri May 8, 2026, 08:25 AM
1 hr ago

...when Robert Reich speaks I listen.

As long as "concerned" Suzie is gone and hope for the best with Platner.

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