Still-stunned Democrats begin to squint toward their future

 Still-stunned Democrats begin to squint toward

their future

A flag is left at an event held by Vice President Kamala Harris at Howard University in Washington, DC,
on November 6, 2024. Daniel Cole/Reuters

(CNN) — Pick one word to describe Republicans and Donald Trump, the focus group

moderator asked, and one word to describe Democrats and Kamala Harris.

"Crazy," said the White woman in her 40s, who hadn't gone to college. Then: "Preachy."

The focus group organized by Harris supporters in western Pennsylvania, not long after the

presidential debate in September, was made up of a dozen people who voted for Trump in

2016 and Joe Biden in 2020 but who were undecided this time, except for being sure that

they'd vote.

Asked to pick between the two words, the woman said she'd "probably go with 'crazy,"'

anguish clearly in her voice.

"Because 'crazy' doesn't look down on me," she said. "'Preachy' does."

In CNN's conversations with two dozen top Democratic operatives and elected officials

since Election Day, the fear isn't just that no one knows the answer to what's next - it's that

they don't even know what the question is at this point.

"Why is it that Donald Trump did 8 points better than he did against Hillary Clinton in Illinois

and yet down ballot, Democrats held every office and gained at the local level across the

state," said Illinois Gov. JB Pritzker, who has already begun analyzing the results and

planning for what's ahead, with an eye on other down-ballot Democratic successes last

week in Trump-won states like Michigan. "Donald Trump is a uniquely more popular figure,

but what is it about him that makes him that way? We can all guess, but why don't we

actually look and find out?"

Democrats' shell shock is real, and not just because top
Harris aides were telling Biden senior staff and former
President Barack Obama aides past 9 p.m. on Tuesday tha
she was about to win. It goes to the core of their
conception of their party.

A few months after Obama won reelection in 2012, his
aides started a group called Battleground Texas,
emblematic of their faith in massive demographic shifts,
particularly among Latinos, that they figured would define a
Democratic era, turn the Lone Star State blue by 2028 and lock Republicans out of the
Electoral College.


Instead, Latino voters, Black men and other marginalized groups shifted toward Trump
nationally this year, ushering Democrats into an unprecedented moment for a modern
political party - grappling with gutting losses for president and other offices; being
potentially locked out of power in Washington with no clear leaders; and an incoming
president who campaigned on radically remaking America and punishing the "enemy
within."
And Texas went redder than it has since Obama's reelection.

Some of the recriminations since Trump's resounding win have taken a self-validating tum.
Vermont Sen. Bemie Sanders, fresh off winning a fourth term, issued a long statement
slamming Democrats for having "abandoned working class people," despite getting fewer
votes than Harris there Tuesday and after four years of cheering on Biden's record, which
union leaders have described as the most pro-labor in American history.
Harris campaign senior adviser David Plouffe responded to the blowback from his social
media post implying blame on Biden by deleting his own X account - even as other Harris
aides complained to CNN that the decisions and consolidation of power by Plouffe,
campaign chair Jen O'Malley Dillon and leading communications strategist Stephanie
Cutter were what sucked the Harris-specific energy out of the run as they tried jamming
her into being an Obama redux.
But what Democrats face is much deeper than the usual finger-pointing by a losing
campaign or speculation about the next set of presidential primary candidates. It goes
beyond easy comments about talking more to the working class when Democrats lost
ground among nearly every demographic in the presidential race.
"The actual way to think about this is not moderate or progressive, liberal or conservative,
but, 'Are you with the people, and against the elites with power?'" argued Rep. Pat Ryan, a
New York Democrat who said he massively outperformed Harris in his competitive Hudson
Valley district. "That's the reality for the people on the ground."

Decades of Democrats talking about and making
substantive moves to improve the economic standing of
people outside the wealthiest didn't make much of a
difference. Nor did the measures enacted by the Biden
administration and the forward-looking promises Harris
made after she took over the campaign, much to the
consternation of the president and top aides.

"In any political landscape, we need normal people to feel a
sense of agency. We need people who are driving trucks
and changing diapers and turning wrenches to run for
office," said Democratic Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez, who won a tight rematch in
Washington state against a Trump-style Republican she'd first beaten coming straight out
of the auto repair shop she runs with her husband. "It's not that we shouldn't have lawyers
in Congress. It's that we need a body that's representative of the American experience. We
need to change our idea of who is credentialed and capable of holding elected office."
"We don't fix politics," Gluesenkamp Perez said, "by becoming more political."

No clear leaders, no clear path to get to
them

From when Biden declared for reelection through when Harris took over, aides at campaign
headquarters in Wilmington, Delaware, would often brag about the "trusted voices" they
were lining up - community leaders or niche celebrities who could validate the candidate
to voters who weren't sold. Democrats who won on Tuesday told CNN that getting to more
wins and a future for America that isn't forever defined by Trumpism would require
candidates themselves to be those trusted voices.
One party strategist argued the focus shouldn't be so much on finding a "Joe Rogan for
Democrats," as has become a popular postelection cause on social media, but finding
Democrats who can go on Rogan's podcast or similar outlets. (Rogan, who endorsed
Trump a day before the election, had backed Sanders in the 2020 Democratic primaries
after the Vermont senator's appearance on his podcast.)

Factors like that will define the next generation of Democrats, multiple leading operatives and strategists
argued, even as some prospective leaders start making moves - Pritzker with a news conference Thursday vowing
to stand in the way of any Trump attempts to hurt people who live in his state; Tim Walz drawing a similar line as he
returned to his duties as Minnesota governor; and California Gov. Gavin Newsom calling for a special legislative session in a show of preemptively pushing back on the incoming president.

And more Democrats around the country are turning to Hakeem Jeffries, the House
minority leader, especially if enough of the outstanding races break their way to make him
speaker.
But Democratic operatives involved in key races told CNN they don't know how to figure
out what those voters who went for Trump want, or how they're doing in appealing to
them.
Asked who she sees as potential leaders for the party going forward, Minnesota Rep. Angie
Craig said it was "too early to answer that question."
"That would be coming to a conclusion before we've actually had a true opportunity to
dissect what happened and figure out how to move forward," she told CNN on Friday, days
after winning a fourth term in a district south of the Twin Cities.
Craig is a moderate. She's also a married lesbian with a strong Democratic voting record,
with four bills from her first term in Congress that Trump signed. On the trail, she talked
about reproductive rights and freedom, but also about apprenticeships over student loans
and getting tough on the border.
In a state where her popular governor was the No. 2 on the Democratic ticket, Craig said
she ran ahead of Harris in a district the vice president barely won.
"If I'm talking to working folks and I'm really listening to them, when an administration puts
forward a college loan debt forgiveness program, my immediate reaction is, 'My God, my
noncollege-educated working people are going to be really pissed off about that,"' Craig
said. "If you don't know where the American people are, or if you dismiss them and say,
'Well, I don't like where you are,' this is going to continue over and over and over again."


Taking 'back the reins on what is sexy'

The concerns that have aired out since the election aren't new. In sessions over the past
year with up-and-coming House Democrats at his office in Washington, Obama urged
them to think about how not to come across as "coastal elites."
Find bills that seem like they're relevant, he told them. Legislation introduced by
Gluesenkamp Perez and New York Rep. Joe Morelle to clear the way for people to get the
parts to repair their own cars and other products without going through the usually more
expensive manufacturers' processes was a perfect example, the former president said,
according to people in the room. Another was Pennsylvania Gov. Josh Shapiro's campaign
promise, fulfilled with an executive order on his first day in office, to remove the college
degree requirement for a range of government jobs.

Harris said in the final week of her campaign that she
would sign a similar order on her first day in office, but it
came in response to a question, almost as an afterthought
rather than a big announcement or consistent theme.
"We need to take back the reins on what is 'sexy,"'
Gluesenkamp Perez said.

Pennsylvania Rep. Chris Deluzio, who increased his own
2022 vote margin in his district outside Pittsburgh and said
he ran ahead of both Harris and Democratic Sen. Bob Casey, attributed his victory in part
to acknowledging that the border was a problem but also to making local economic
arguments that went hard at big corporations for raising prices in ways that evoked the
New Deal more than "Bidenomics."
"The more Democrats have gotten away from that, the more you've given space for a guy
like Trump to yell about tariffs - and people want to listen," Deluzio said.
To Deluzio, the woman in that westem Pennsylvania focus group from September sounded
like voters he knows in his district.
"You cannot have a candidate or a movement or a party be perceived as resenting people,"
he said.


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