Democrats know they’re in trouble. They’re saying as much to anyone willing to listen.
“We’re not trying to hide this,” Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee Executive Director Tim Persico told Politico.
“There is little margin for error,” Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee member Rep. Ami Bera of California said of the 2022 election cycle. “We have to run perfect races.”
Faced with a demand for perfection, some vulnerable Democrats are declining to run at all. Of the 10 House Democratic retirements ahead of the 2022 midterm election cycle, most “appear to be more motivated by electoral concerns,” according to FiveThirtyEight’s Nathaniel Rakich.
That word — popular — has become something of an obsession among anxious center-left Democrats.
The good news for Democrats, however, is they don’t believe they have to do much to avert an electoral debacle.
“It’s about emphasis,” Persico told Politico. “Everything we are doing and everything we’ve talked about doing is incredibly popular.”
All Democrats must do is continue to be popular.
That word — popular — has become something of an obsession among anxious center-left Democrats. It’s contributing to a mania overtaking the liberal media ecosystem. And the unlikely figure around whom apprehensive Democrats find themselves rallying, 30-year-old political strategist David Shor, has the answer: Just talk about popular stuff.
Sounds easy enough. In a sprawling profile of Shor and his philosophy, New York Times analyst Ezra Klein drilled down into Shor’s “theory of popularism,” which consists largely of following the research into voters’ preferences. A commitment to popularism should lead Democrats to pursue minor, technocratic changes to existing programs — allowing Medicare to negotiate prescription drug prices, for example, even if that conflicts with their moderate sensibilities — while eschewing more revolutionary changes to the social compact. Above all, Shor noted, Democrats should not allow their party’s young, white, “woke” and utterly unrepresentative activist progressive base to speak for them.
Of course, there is common sense to these recommendations. They are informed by Shor’s own bitter experience. Formerly an analyst with the left-wing consulting firm Civis Analytics, Shor was let go after those same activists demanded his head following his decision to tweet, sans commentary, then-Princeton University assistant professor Omar Wasow’s study establishing a connection between poor Democratic electoral performance and riotous urban violence. That outsize reaction to Shor’s prudent admonition in the long, hot summer of 2020 illustrates Shor’s point — as did the Democratic lawmakers who lashed out at progressive activists after the party’s poor showing in last year’s congressional elections. Defunding the police is not popular, nor is adopting a permissive attitude toward abject criminality. The strategist’s recommendation is simple: Don’t let ideologues drive the party into those cul-de-sacs.
Opposing radicalism is one thing, but what should Democrats be for? Beyond tinkering around the margins of the nation’s entitlement programs, Shor suggested Democrats endorse a federal jobs guarantee. “Honestly bummed that this never made its way into the reconciliation package,” the analyst confessed. “Super popular with working class voters and seems high salience enough to break through into the discourse!” When asked just what the people guaranteed a job would be doing exactly, he suggested something along the lines of a permanent and ongoing census.









