Who’s to blame for Democratic losses on Tuesday? Democrats and pundits have plenty of ideas, most of which boil down to “not me,” while Republicans are rushing to take credit for their own strategies. Are there any pearls of wisdom to be gleaned from these quick and dirty post-mortems, which accuse Democrats of running too far to the left, too far to the right, or even too far to the middle in 2014? We packed them into a list for you to judge. Here are some of the most prominent explanations for why Democrats blew it.
They didn’t hug the president enough
Individually, Democrats in states where Obama was unpopular had an obvious motive to distance themselves from the president. Collectively, however, they may have dragged themselves and the party down by accepting the premise that their party’s leader was a failure and not claiming credit for recent job growth, low gas prices, expanded insurance coverage, and even improved border security. It also made it harder to fire up base voters still supportive of the president in an election where turnout ended up abysmally low.
%22There%20is%20limited%20ability%20to%20run%20away%20from%20the%20president%20of%20your%20own%20party.%22′
“There is limited ability to run away from the president of your own party,” Simon Rosenberg, a Democratic consultant who worked on the party’s recovery from the 1994 GOP wave, told msnbc. “What we learned in 2000 and now in 2014 is that when you do that it’s much more likely you’ll get all of their downside and none of the upside — and there was a lot of upside to being with Obama.”
In an impressive bit of trolling, the top Republican officials responsible for tying Democrats to Obama in races around the country agreed with this popular Democratic take.
“They sidelined their best messenger,” Rob Collins, executive director of the National Republican Senatorial Committee told reporters on Thursday. “They sidelined the president.”
No, the president hugged them too much!
On the other hand, maybe the Democrats should have distanced themselves from the White House even more. Under this telling, Obama threw the GOP a lifeline after the government shutdown by botching the health care rollout, mishandled a series of crises in the public eye, and then made things worse by announcing that his “policies are on the ballot, every single one of them” a month before the election.
Yep. RT @voxdotcom: The simple truth about what really went wrong for Democrats in 2014 http://t.co/DnAC52urax pic.twitter.com/rptRgJRbtn
— Guy Cecil (@guycecil) November 6, 2014
“The president’s approval rating is barely 40 percent,” Harry Reid’s top aide David Krone griped to The Washington Post. “What else more is there to say? … He wasn’t going to play well in North Carolina or Iowa or New Hampshire. I’m sorry. It doesn’t mean that the message was bad, but sometimes the messenger isn’t good.”
Guy Cecil, executive director of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee, also approvingly tweeted out an op-ed in Vox noting that losing Senate candidates earned a higher share of the vote than Obama’s approval rating. While approval ratings and vote share aren’t exactly comparable (many candidates outperformed their own low approval ratings this year) it shows where the DSCC’s head is at in the blame game.
No, it was Harry Reid’s fault!
Some red state Democrats argue that Reid handicapped the party by refusing to hold votes on Republican bills, which would have given moderates a chance to demonstrate their independence from the party.
Photo essay: Voters, young and old, take to polls
“Harry, let us vote, let’s do something. It’s easier for me to go home and explain what I voted for and against than to explain why I don’t vote at all,” Democratic Senator Joe Manchin of West Virginia told The Washington Post on Wednesday, calling the election “a real ass-whuppin’.” On Friday, Republican National Committee Chairman Reince Priebus went even further, saying at a breakfast hosted by the Christian Science Monitor that Reid’s refusal to let Dems vote on GOP bills “ensured their defeats.”
They didn’t fire up Latinos
The booming Latino vote was a critical feature of President Obama’s 2008 and 2012 victories, but in a year where Republicans killed immigration reform, advocacy groups complained the issue didn’t get enough attention.
Nationally, activists have argued that President Obama depressed turnout by punting on a planned decision to revamp deportation procedures. In Colorado, the 2014 Senate state where the Latino vote had the most power, they accused Democratic Senator Mark Udall of letting opponent Cory Gardner cast himself as a moderate by not running ads challenging him on immigration reform.
“Gardner did a much better job confusing the community, but the reality is Udall did not embrace the issue,” Ben Monterroso, executive director of Mi Famillia Vota, told msnbc. “For what reason, I don’t know.”
It’s not entirely clear the degree to which Gardner succeeded here: An election eve survey by Latino Decisions gave Udall a wide lead with Latinos, but exit polls showed the two tied, an incredible development in a state where Democrats have dominated the Hispanic vote. Either way, activists on the ground say he showed surprising strength in their door-to-door visits with voters.
They didn’t fire up millennials
In terms of raw numbers, this is the biggest failure. Young voters supported Democrats in 2014 just as they have in the past several elections, but only 12% of voters who showed up at the polls were younger than 30 while a whopping 37% were older than 60. Even last minute viral videos like Lil’ Jon’s “Turn Out For What” didn’t convince millennials to show up.
Infographic: What changed in the battleground states?
“As a long-term proposition, that’s bad news for Republicans, who now rely heavily on the nation’s oldest generation,” msnbc’s Steve Benen wrote. “But this only matters when voters under 30 are prepared to stand up and be counted.”
Part of the problem, Democrats argue, is new voting restrictions in many GOP-controlled states that make it harder for students to vote by requiring identification at the polls, but not accepting a campus ID card. On the messaging front, though, there wasn’t any obvious national youth-oriented issue that Democrats put much oomph behind, except for the occasional mention of student loan debt.
They didn’t run on middle class issues enough
Some Democrats felt that the party didn’t offer enough obvious relief to middle class voters worried about their job and stagnant wages, a broad group Obama targeted relentlessly in his 2012 campaign.
%22%5BThe%20minimum%20wage%5D%20in%20itself%20was%20not%20enough.%22′
“I’m a strong believer in raising the minimum wage and it needs to happen,” Democratic strategist Greg Greene told msnbc. “That said it’s not something people necessarily identify with when they see themselves as middle class. That in itself was not enough.”
Actually, they didn’t focus on the poor enough
In the wake of what they’re calling an “election disaster,” progressive members of Congress are joining with more than dozen major left-leaning advocacy organizations to call on Obama to do more to help the economically disadvantaged. They’ll hold a press conference on Monday to “demand the President to take more aggressive executive action to help low-wage workers and boost the economy,” implying he didn’t do enough before Tuesday.









