A new piece of Democrats' midterm strategy: Being 'practical'
A new piece of Democratsâ midterm strategy: Being âpracticalâ
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- Polling shows pessimism about the economy has increased among all Americans and most believe the country is in an affordability crisis.
- Democrats are attempting to capture enough swing voters to win a House majority in November.
WASHINGTON â Democrats are making a growing effort to adopt a pragmatic focus as they campaign on affordability in the midterms, as some within the party push for moving away from ideological arguments.
Across the country, Democratic candidates are trying to win over voters by talking about real-life scenarios, framing other platform issues in economic terms and, strategists say, aiming to shift a perception that Democrats deal in the abstract.
They see an opening created by votersâ focus on the economy and their ability as the party not in power to leverage affordability as the key midterms issue as Trumpâs economic approval remains low. Trump has dismissed the issue, calling affordability a âhoaxâ by Democrats while also promising economic improvements.
âThere has been a learning process in being able to take what Trump and the Republicans are doing and make sure that [candidates] are coming back to the real-world economic implications of whatever that might be,â Democratic strategist Alex Jacquez, who served in the Biden White House. âThatâs where maybe [Democrats] havenât always, in the recent past, made the full connection all the way through.â
Now, âthe moment is ripe,â he suggested, for the party to shift its image.
The Democratsâ concentration on affordability and the economy has defined their midterm messaging, playing off elevated inflation, the effects of Trumpâs tariffs and high gas prices caused by the war in Iran. The party is attempting to capture enough swing voters to win a House majority in November, and some believe the Senate could also be within reach.
Polling shows pessimism about the economy has increased among all Americans and most believe the country is in an affordability crisis. Americans most frequently mention government leadership and economic issues as the countryâs most important problems in Gallup polling.
The federal housing bill does a lot of little things. Supporters hope it will put a dent in both California and the nationâs housing shortage.
Voters also increasingly disapprove of Trumpâs handling of the economy, including working-class white voters who make up a key part of his base. In an NPR/PBS News/Marist Poll last month, Americans gave the president his lowest-ever approval rating on the economy at 33%.
Speaking in Pennsylvania on Thursday, Trump said of affordability: âThatâs a fake word that they use. They caused the affordability problem. Itâs called high prices.â
Rep. Adam Gray, a Democrat who represents a purple Central Valley district and is a member of the center-left Blue Dog Coalition in Congress, said he believes voters have grown frustrated by the failure of Washington lawmakers to pay attention to what the people want out from government.
He pointed to Central Valley growers whose business has been affected, he said, by the rising price of fuel and fertilizer, the squeeze on the labor market caused by immigration enforcement and changes to federal programs.
âHow regular people experience politics, itâs not the kind of ideological debates we have in Washington,â Gray said. âItâs the experience of doing something, whether thatâs shopping for groceries or going to the lake to go boating with your family and realizing the price of gas is through the roof or the road to the lake is in disrepair.â
At a time when Democrats have debated how to embrace a party identity beyond opposing Trump and intra-party fights between progressive and moderate candidates have drawn attention, some believe the âpracticalâ tactic may offer one key to the partyâs path forward.
In Texas, Democratic candidates are pointing to the impact of data centers on water supply or the consequences of the stateâs abortion ban, said Matt Angle, director of Lone Star Project, a political research organization that works to help get Democrats elected.
âThe fact that Corpus Christi is running out of water ... [or] you have women who have died because they were denied abortion services,â Angle said. âItâs very important that those things not be talked about in ideological terms but in practical terms. I think Democrats are doing a better job of that than ever before.â
âReal life is happening on the ground,â Angle added. âI think Democrats see that.â
Republicans pursued a similar strategy successfully in 2024, and their attacks on Democrats for focusing on cultural issues may have been successful in pushing Democrats away from that messaging, said Republican strategist Brittany Martinez.
âThey have made it clear thatâs the direction in which theyâre trying to go,â she said of Democrats. âI also think you have outliers of the party that sometimes suck all the oxygen out of the room and maybe derail that message.â
National Republican Congressional Committee spokesperson Christian Martinez said Democratsâ economic record, including in California under Gov. Gavin Newsom, demonstrates a failure to prioritize working families.
âItâs laughable that Democrats are trying to make kitchen-table issues their brand,â he said. âIt only proves their political brand is broken, while Californians continue living every day with the receipts from Democratsâ failed agenda.â
Republican National Committee Chair Joe Gruters said Thursday at a summit convened by the Washington-based news outlet the Hill that he was confident the party would retain the House and Senate and projected optimism about the economy.
âHeâs going to bat for the American worker every single day,â Gruters said of Trump. âHeâs going to continue to do everything he can to get the nose of the economy in this country up and to get prices down.â
These are the most and least affordable cities and towns in California, based on a Times analysis of income and housing data from the Census.
But as Trump appears to prioritize other issues, Martinez said, Republicans are facing their own uphill battle to win over swing voters.
âWhen the president has mocked affordability, said itâs not a crisis, I donât think that helps [Republicans],â Martinez said. âDemocrats have an opportunity to capitalize on that right now.â
Both moderate and progressive Democrats see the moment as a chance to define what the party stands for beyond opposing Trump, and both have seized on real-life arguments, though the approaches differ.
Progressives have long framed a spectrum of issues in economic terms, said Usamah Andrabi, spokesperson for the progressive caucus Justice Democrats.
âThat has always been the progressive economic playbook, and I think itâs about time that the other wings of the Democratic Party catch up to us,â Andrabi said.
That also means, he said, not backing away from other issues, such as abortion, foreign wars and healthcare.
âIt has always been the right that has sought to divide our communities on these so-called culture war issues,â Andrabi said. âOur vision forward should be one that includes everyone... That does not mean simply ignoring some peopleâs most urgent crises to focus on something else, because these are interconnected.â
Climate advocates, for instance, are âeffectively connectingâ climate to top midterm issues, including including gas and utility costs, AI data centers and the Iran war, said Jamie Henn, executive director of nonprofit communications lab Fossil Fuel Media, and have encouraged Democratic candidates to do the same.
âClimate, like many issues, doesnât win itself on its own merits. Itâs in the ways that you talk about it and connect it to kitchen-table issues,â Henn said. âDo it in the right way â itâs not a science lecture on global warming, itâs a story about how clean energy can reduce your bills.â
Still, getting more candidates to pick up those messages can be a steep climb, he said. Advocates in some spaces, including climate, have worried about their issues being sidelined.
âThere are Democrats that could be threading this needle who arenât,â Henn said. âWe know the issues that climate needs to be connected to, but [politicians] need⌠to do a better job to clearly articulate the messages.â
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