Takeaways on How Democrats Can Reconnect Culturally with the Working Class
1. Move Away from Identity Politics
• Stop addressing voters as identity blocs and instead focus on shared American values.
• Use plain language and avoid jargon or abbreviations that can alienate voters.
• Acknowledge that people have multiple identities (e.g., Black and a veteran) rather than reducing them
to one label.
2. Emphasize Shared Values and Cultural Alignment
• Frame rights as about "freedom and justice," not just identity-based concerns.
• Highlight similarities between marginalized groups and mainstream American values.
• Embrace patriotism, community, and traditional American imagery (e.g., farms, main streets).
3. Rebalance the Party’s Cultural Messaging
• Reject fringe positions that alienate the median voter.
• Avoid overly moralistic or condescending messaging; speak plainly and directly.
• Allow candidates to express personal faith and values without fear of backlash.
4. Reduce Far-Left Influence and Infrastructure
• Build a moderate Democratic infrastructure, including media, talent pipelines, and
communications networks.
• Push back against far-left staffers and groups that exert a disproportionate influence on policy
and messaging.
• Ban far-left candidate questionnaires and refuse to participate in forums that create ideological
purity tests.
5. Engage with the Working Class in Their Spaces
• Get out of elite circles and into real communities (e.g., tailgates, gun shows, local restaurants, churches).
• Own the failures of Democratic governance in large cities and commit to improving local government.
• Show up in unfriendly media spaces and engage with voters outside traditional Democratic strongholds.
6. Improve Democratic Communication & Media Strategy
• Conduct a comprehensive study on media consumption to better understand how to reach voters.
• Develop a stronger, more relatable Democratic media presence (podcasts, social media, sports
broadcasting).
• Encourage candidates to be bold, engaging, and authentic in their messaging rather than overly
polished.
7. Embrace Moderation, Individualism, and Masculinity
• Reconnect with values like hard work, rugged individualism, and entrepreneurialism.
• Be more accepting of masculinity and male voters who feel alienated from the party.
• Shift focus from progressive "mission creep" to core Democratic issues that resonate broadly.
8. Revise Democratic Fundraising Priorities
• Move away from the dominance of small-dollar donors whose preferences may not align with the
broader electorate.
• Give candidates and campaigns more flexibility in how they spend funds without excessive donor
constraints.