This is an adapted excerpt from the Feb. 2 episode of “Ayman.”
When Donald Trump entered office again last month, a Gallup poll showed him at historically low inaugural approval ratings, with only 47% of Americans approving of him — similar to the 45% approval rating he boasted after his first inauguration. For comparison, Joe Biden entered office with a 57% approval rating from Gallup.
Martin takes over a political party in desperate need of new leadership and a new strategy.
Trump’s low approval rating is a reminder that, contrary to what the president and his MAGA allies have said, his win in November was not a “landslide” and the American people didn’t give him some sweeping mandate. But if that’s the case, you may be asking yourself: How did he win the White House? And why are Republicans in control of the House and the Senate too?
Well, it turns out, people dislike the Democrats even more. A recent Wall Street Journal poll showed 60% of Americans view the party unfavorably. That tracks with what we saw in November’s election, in which Democrats lost ground with nearly every demographic group.
It’s in this political wilderness that Democrats gathered to elect a new Democratic National Committee chair. On Saturday, the party selected Ken Martin, a longtime leader of the state Democratic Party in Minnesota. He defeated Wisconsin Democratic Party Chairman Ben Wikler, even though Wikler had the support of former Speaker Nancy Pelosi, Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries.
Martin takes over a political party in desperate need of new leadership and a new strategy. We’re in a time when Americans badly need a functioning opposition party to push back against the madness we’re seeing from Trump and his billionaire co-president, Elon Musk.
But it’s not just the average person asking Democrats to put up more of a fight. The New York Times reported on a tense call last week in which six Democratic governors pressed Schumer to be more aggressive in fighting back against Trump’s agenda.
Minnesota Gov. Tim Walz was on the call and reportedly argued that “Democrats needed to be more visible on television presenting an alternate vision of governing — not just complaining about what Mr. Trump is doing.”
That’s good advice: Don’t just say what you are against. Lay out a vision for what you are for. But before the party can lay out a vision of what it is for, it needs to actually figure out what that is.
Last week, when the Trump administration was making a big show out of deporting undocumented migrants, Democratic Sen. Chris Murphy bragged in a post on X:








