US Democrats Throw Money at a Problem: Countering G.O.P. Clout Online - At private gatherings, strategists and donors are swapping ideas to help the party capture the digital mojo that helped President Trump win. Yes, there’s a price tag.

1747827689840.webp

Six months after the Democratic Party’s crushing 2024 defeat, the party’s megadonors are being inundated with overtures to spend tens of millions of dollars to develop an army of left-leaning online influencers.

At donor retreats and in pitch documents seen by The New York Times, liberal strategists are pushing the party’s rich backers to reopen their wallets for a cavalcade of projects to help Democrats, as the cliché now goes, “find the next Joe Rogan.” The proposals, the scope of which has not been previously reported, are meant to energize glum donors and persuade them that they can compete culturally with President Trump — if only they can throw enough money at the problem.

Democrats widely believe they must grow more creative in stoking online enthusiasm for their candidates, particularly in less outwardly political forms of media like sports or lifestyle podcasts. Many now take it as gospel that Mr. Trump’s victory last year came in part because he cultivated an ecosystem of supporters on YouTube, TikTok and podcasts, in addition to the many Trump-friendly hosts on Fox News.

The quiet effort amounts to an audacious — skeptics might say desperate — bet that Democrats can buy more cultural relevance online, despite the fact that casually right-leaning touchstones like Mr. Rogan’s podcast were not built by political donors and did not rise overnight.

Wealthy donors tend to move in packs, and some jaded liberals worry that the excitement could cause money to flow into projects that are not fully fleshed out. They argue that the latest pitches on the left are coming from operatives who are hungry to meet donors’ demand for a shiny new object. In a break from the past, some of the Democrats’ new ventures are for-profit companies.

And so far, there are still more ideas than hard, committed money: One Democratic operative described compiling a spreadsheet of 26 active projects related to creators, over a dozen of which are new since November. But a few of the efforts have ties to major donors that could give them liftoff.

“It needs to start with a legitimate investment,” said Marissa McBride, a Democratic strategist who leads a donor group called Mind the Gap. But she added, “There has to be something that is happening organically as well.”

Shedding a ‘Hall Monitor’ Reputation​

The first out of the gate has been Chorus, a well-publicized liberal nonprofit group co-founded by the Democratic influencer Brian Tyler Cohen.

But others have stayed under wraps until now. In November, Ms. McBride and other liberal operatives gathered in Washington for a series of meetings to survey the election wreckage. At the headquarters of American Bridge, one of the largest Democratic donor networks, they eventually hatched a plan for a for-profit media company called AND Media, which stands for “Achieve Narrative Dominance.”

The company, incorporated in March, says it is aiming to raise $45 million over the next four years. The group hopes to have a $70 million budget over that time frame based on predictions of $25 million in revenue. It says it has raised $7 million so far. Ms. McBride and Christian Tom, who led digital strategy for the Biden White House, have pitched the company to American Bridge donors as a broad cultural project.

Hoping to move away from “the current didactic, hall monitor style of Democratic politics that turns off younger audiences,” AND Media will focus on directly funding influencers and co-producing their content, opening a creator talent agency and starting by “inking deals with four ‘flagship’ creators,” according to a business plan shared with The Times.

Another effort with ties to major donors is called Project Bullhorn, which is meant to pool contributions to back creator projects. The money is running through Jason Berkenfeld, who has advised the political giving of Eric Schmidt, the billionaire former Google chief executive, and others. Mr. Berkenfeld pitched the project to major Democratic contributors at a briefing this month featuring Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey.

Mr. Berkenfeld is seeking to raise $35 million in the first year for Project Bullhorn and aligned work, according to two people who have spoken to him. He is largely trying to amplify existing influencer networks: An early recipient of the money he raises will be a fund backing left-leaning creators on YouTube. Another will be a “matchmaking service” to book these creators on YouTube shows and podcasts.

Project Bullhorn plans to include a for-profit arm that will “have the potential to reap significant returns,” according to a concept document obtained by The Times. “We will need to create self-sustaining businesses if we want to build an echo chamber with sufficient scale and reach.”

‘We Can’t Afford to Wait’​

All of these programs are somewhat similar, and they will compete for scarce capital. Democratic strategists and fund-raisers say that many major liberal donors are still being stingy with their money — and that the few laying out cash are more focused on legal efforts to fight the Trump administration.

One of the top aides on former Vice President Kamala Harris’s 2024 campaign, Rob Flaherty, and a digital media executive, Mike Vainisi, have been in conversations with donors in recent weeks ahead of what is expected to be a multimillion-dollar fund-raising round for a new for-profit company called Channel Zero. The group is meant to provide back-office services to content creators who already have large followings.

Mr. Flaherty is also advising Project Echo, a new four-year $52 million influencer program from People for the American Way, a progressive nonprofit group. The group is spending about $10 million of its own money and pitching donors for the rest, according to its president, Svante Myrick.

A program called Double Tap Democracy, meanwhile, is working with 2,000 mostly apolitical creators who generally have smaller followings.

The project was started by Rachel Irwin, who led a $30 million influencer program last cycle for Future Forward, the biggest Democratic super PAC. But there was tension during the campaign over the size of the influencer program, which some donors wanted to be even bigger, according to a person briefed on the conversations.

Ms. Irwin incorporated Double Tap late last year. She received an initial grant of about $250,000 from Future Forward and has raised money from some Silicon Valley donors. She has argued to others that the party did not invest early or enough in cultural talent in the last election, and that she is trying to learn from her experience at Future Forward.

“We can’t keep running these programs late in the cycle, only to break down after or treat these relationships as transactional and expect success,” Ms. Irwin wrote to allies in a March email seen by The Times. “Every day we don’t engage online is a missed opportunity — and we can’t afford to wait.”

To some Democratic operatives, the repeated gatherings of donors to mull such ideas has felt like a ceaseless calendar of cattle calls.

Aides to the liberal donors George Soros and Laurene Powell Jobs held an idea-a-thon in February in Washington. This month, about 50 digital operatives presented their proposals at a hotel in Austin, Texas, at an event organized by Civic Resolve, a think tank backed by a Walmart heir. A gathering hosted by Future Forward this month in Half Moon Bay, Calif., featured a session on “Return on Culture” that paired Nimay Ndolo, a progressive content creator, with Jeff Lawson, a Democratic megadonor who recently bought the satirical website The Onion.

And Mark Gallogly, a private-equity veteran and Democratic donor, has invited contributors and operatives to the latest of a series of gatherings on this issue on Tuesday in New York.

Mr. Flaherty, the former Harris strategist, who has been at some donor events, said emulating the right’s success would take time.

“The key is building off what’s already resonating and investing in it,” he said. “If it all goes into more tools for delivering poll-tested messaging, it’ll fall flat with its audience. At that point, you might as well just buy ads.”

https://www.nytimes.com/2025/05/20/us/politics/democrats-influencers-trump.html (Archive)
 
Most of the democrats just don't understand who or what someone like Rogan is. The "alternative media" strategy for democrats was to go on Howard Stern. They put both Biden and Kamala Harris on with him during the last election cycle.
The white people that run the democratic party and old and completely out of touch.
 
Trump didn't win because of "digital mojo". Trump won because his opposition was nazis and pedophiles and literal prostitutes with no political or executive experience

The dnc shifted openly hard right, people don't like that, so they went center libertarian-ish
 
Same reason they went after comedy and why they have a hate boner for Rogan and his ilk. You can't pay your way to success in comedy, there's no comedy certification you can buy that will force clubs to hire you. Either you're funny or you're not. it doesn't matter how ugly or deformed you are, it doesn't matter if your politics are a full 180 from the comedy club's, you'll have comedy club owners who despise curse words or sex talk begging fucking Amy Schumer to perform at their clubs because its all about what people will laugh at.
amy schumer tested this
 
They wailed that they needed a 'liberal Rush Limbaugh.' (I remember when they tried to astroturf Mike Malloy as competition to Rush over 20 years ago)
They opined that they needed a 'liberal Fox News.'
They complained that they needed a 'liberal Matt Drudge.'
Now they think they need a 'liberal Joe Rogan' (when did he stop being one?)
air america never took off but even if it did it'd end up like democracy now where they'd hate their previously held ideals because orange man said something relatable. trump said something good about julian assange so now assange and wikileaks is the devil. or rah rah the ukraine war because Trump asked "what does america get from dumping money into the ukraine?"
so never
we won...for now
dont underestimate the gope waiting in the wings to sandbag our winning streak. your local gop is going to be full of romneyites and mccainites who know the party's rules to freeze you out.
 
Last edited:
I have had the strange pleasure of being able to watch the corporate/political media establishment kill itself by increments and not understand that it is doing so.

They wailed that they needed a 'liberal Rush Limbaugh.' (I remember when they tried to astroturf Mike Malloy as competition to Rush over 20 years ago)
They opined that they needed a 'liberal Fox News.'
They complained that they needed a 'liberal Matt Drudge.'
Now they think they need a 'liberal Joe Rogan' (when did he stop being one?)
Memo to dems: sorry but your message don't interest us...until they put a gun on our heads just like that guy who put a gun on a dog head featured on a cover of a old issue of National Lampoon.
 
The thing is the left has A TON of voices but they all have to go through so many purity test that even if they have 80% of the voices its still not enough.

Tim Dillon did a sit down with a CNN girl and is just ripping her world apart clip by clip.




Look how she reacts to Louis C.K name coming up.
 
they eventually hatched a plan for a for-profit media company called AND Media, which stands for “Achieve Narrative Dominance.”
Was "Talk At People Louder" already taken?

Controlling the narrative so people cannot contradict you is Cluster B behavior. What is progressivism, but Cluster B Politics?

It's satisfying to see them twist in the wind, spending literal billions on paid shills just to have a few cargo-cult imitations of what the "Right" developed organically. They cannot win without censorship, much less compete in the marketplace of ideas.
 
Last edited:
Remember when the left was going to take over talk radio to beat the conservatives? Anyone remember Air America?
Remember when Al Gore was going to take over cable TV for progressives and beat fox news with his "Current TV" network?

This is just another round of nonsense by which political grifters separate wealthy people from their money.



This is how dumb they are. Kamala runs a terrible campaign and loses. But then these people go running back to the same, out of touch people who ran that bad campaign to fix things now. They just double-down on failure.

The problem for democrats is that on the inside, its a party of awful out of touch rich white people and celebrities. Its a party of the few that doesn't really have much of any appeal to anyone.
So this is what we do. Josh comes out as progressive, he gets a bunch of money to convert the chuds, and then we laugh ourselves to the bank.
 
  • Optimistic
Reactions: Strix454
The thing is the left has A TON of voices but they all have to go through so many purity test that even if they have 80% of the voices its still not enough.

Tim Dillon did a sit down with a CNN girl and is just ripping her world apart clip by clip.


View attachment 7393171

Look how she reacts to Louis C.K name coming up.
Tim Dillon is the best person to sit down and do a interview like this.
 
Back