By David M. Drucker
Wednesday, June 11, 2025
During a recent political conference in Washington, D.C.,
a collection of lawmakers condemned the Democratic Party as elitist, leftist,
and out of touch. All the speakers were Democrats—as were most in an audience
that applauded at nearly every turn.
“By and large, in the Democratic Party, we have a
cultural problem,” Michigan Rep. Kristen McDonald Rivet said on stage during an
appearance at WelcomeFest 2025, an annual gathering of centrist Democrats
organized by WelcomePAC and more than half-dozen like-minded groups that
believe left-wing extremists have become too dominant in the Democratic Party.
“We spend a lot of time in rooms with super-smart people
creating policy agendas and thinking: ‘What words do we have to give?’” she
added. “We’ve got a bunch of Democrats who’ve started to curse. Like the
problem is, we didn’t say ‘f—’ enough. The real problem is that we have created
too many rooms where somebody with mud on their boots doesn’t feel like they’re
welcome.”
McDonald Rivet is a first-term lawmaker who in 2024
captured a central Michigan district, anchored in Saginaw, that delivered more
than 50 percent of its vote to President Donald Trump. Here at WelcomeFest, a
conference dedicated to elevating centrist Democrats, the congresswoman’s
unvarnished critique of the party was, well, welcomed. Organizers and those in
attendance believe running more pragmatists with military, small business, and
working class backgrounds is key to improving the Democrats’ prospects in swing
districts and battleground states.
“It’s our job to win,” WelcomePAC co-founder Lauren
Harper Pope said in opening remarks to a downtown Washington hotel ballroom of
a few hundred conference-goers grappling with how to reverse the rightward
shift of voting blocs—Hispanics, working class,
young
men—long considered core Democratic constituencies. The picture painted by
Lakshya Jain, a data scientist who models voting behavior, is dire. He told the
conference Democrats need to prioritize fielding candidates “who know how to
talk to ordinary people.”
Indeed, many of the Democrats’ problems are basic,
according to the lawmakers who headlined WelcomeFest and took turns ripping the
bark off of the party.
Democrats often fail to nominate appealing candidates,
listen to voters, and craft agendas based on voters’ top priorities, the
speakers noted, instead yielding to the demands of vocal left-wing activists
and advocacy groups who represent a distinct minority of center-left voters.
New York Rep. Tom Suozzi, who was reelected in a suburban Long Island district
that backed Trump with 51.4 percent of the vote, said he won because he both
listened to his constituents and addressed issues they cared about most.
“If you ask the American voters, what are the issues
they’re most concerned about—the top five issues—they say: the economy,
immigration, taxes, crime, and health care,” Suozzi, 62, said. “If you ask the
same people, what do you think the Democrats are focused on, they say: choice,
LGBT protections, health care—there is a little bit of a crossover there—saving
democracy, and climate change.”
“Those are, all five, very important issues,” he added.
“But they are not the issues we’re going to win a national campaign on.”
From a similar but distinct angle, first-term Rep. Adam
Gray said much the same thing. Gray, who represents an agriculture-heavy
district in California’s Central Valley that Trump won with 51.4 percent, hails
from the dairy industry. When problems arise on a farm—which is often—immediate
solutions are required to keep the operation going. Embracing this sort of
political pragmatism, and deemphasizing polarizing ideology, would go a long
way toward improving Democrats’ prospects, Gray suggested.
“It’s funny to listen to the dialogue … about how to fix
the Democratic Party,” Gray said. “We should start by just solving some
problems. Do something that actually improves somebody’s life and the rest will
follow.”
Gray joined Rep. Marie Gluesenkamp Perez of Washington
state and Rep. Jared Golden of Maine on stage to discuss the secrets of their
success in House districts Trump won in 2024. (All three affiliate with the
congressional Blue Dog caucus of conservative and moderate Democrats.)
Gluesenkamp Perez’s seat, with its mixture of exurban and
rural communities, delivered 50.3 percent of its vote to the president. Her
advice to fellow Democrats looking to compete in similar districts, or for
avoiding a 2028 repeat of what happened last November? Essentially—stop playing
ideological enforcer and do what it takes to truly broaden the Democratic tent.
“People are profoundly heterodox. If you actually talk to
normal people, the same person who has pretty left views on trans rights will
also be very fiercely [pro] Second Amendment,” Gluesenkamp Perez said. “We are
a small caucus. There’s 10 of us. But I would argue that most Americans are
Blue Dogs.”
WelcomePAC, a political action committee that supports
centrist Democrats, and WelcomeFest join other Democratic-aligned groups,
gatherings
and initiatives
exploring ways to revive the party’s prospects in the wake of Trump’s return to
the White House, achieved with a narrow
but decisive victory over then-Vice President Kamala Harris. This effort
has been joined by Democrats across the political spectrum. But left-wing
progressives, uninterested in ceding power to other factions of the party’s
coalition, are also participating and it’s unclear whether centrist Democrats
can succeed in pushing the party toward the political middle.
But what is clear is that centrist Democrats are willing
to push back on their left flank in a way others in the party are not. For
instance: Israel’s war in Gaza to eliminate Hamas, the terrorist group that
murdered 1,200 people, mostly civilians, and took hundreds hostage on October
7, 2023. The progressive base, sympathetic to the Palestinians, has protested
those Democrats who support Israel’s military campaign to decapitate Hamas and
defend the Jewish state’s right to exist.
During last summer’s Democratic National Convention in
Chicago, then-President Joe Biden said
during his speech of the pro-Palestinian protesters who were denouncing his
administration’s military support for Israel: “Those protesters out in the
street, they have a point. A lot of innocent people are being killed on both
sides.” Harris also expressed sympathy for pro-Palestinian protesters, saying to them during
one of her 2024 campaign rallies: “I hear you.”
But when New York Rep. Ritchie Torres, a prominent Israel
supporter, was interrupted by roughly a half-dozen pro-Palestinian protesters
during his WelcomeFest appearance—some flashing homemade signs that read “Gays
Against Genocide”—organizers quickly shut it down. They were immediately
removed from the ballroom as Carly Simon’s “You’re So Vain” blasted
from the loudspeakers, with its catchphrase line: “You probably think this song
is about you.” None of the Democratic lawmakers or people in the audience
expressed solidarity with the agitators.
Torres represents a deep blue New York City district
anchored in the Bronx. But the congressman has become something of a folk hero
to centrist Democrats focused on growing the party because of his willingness
to speak out against left-wing activists. And after the protesters were cleared
out, Torres had a message for the centrists, too.
“I’m often saying what many people are thinking but are
too afraid to say,” he explained. “I feel like the greatest threat to our
democracy does not come from the far left or the far right—but it comes from
cowardice and complacency of a center that lives in fear of extremes.”
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