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Hey, Democrats — want to keep losing? Then keep sidelining Jasmine Crockett.

Hey, Democrats — want to keep losing? Then keep sidelining Jasmine Crockett.

The Hill2 days ago
If Democrats want to keep losing elections by chasing elusive, outdated ideals of 'moderate' legislation, then they should continue sidelining rising stars like Rep. Jasmine Crockett (D-Texas). Crockett is a fresh voice representing millions of Americans who demand something new from their elected leaders.
A recent Atlantic article revealed that some party elders view Crockett as 'undisciplined.' On the surface, it sounds like standard political advice. But in context, it exposes the respectability politics at play and evinces a deep disconnect from the cultural, media, and generational shifts that have defined the last decade. President Trump has understood these shifts and weaponized them to great success. We in the Biden administration seemed not to understand them — or worse, we just resented them.
The Democratic Party needs a change of mindset. Its legacy leaders must either evolve or step aside. The youth aren't with them. Black men are moving to conservative parties. Our cities are slipping away, and the old coalition is breaking.
So why is there so much pressure on Crockett to be polished?
Mark Zuckerberg is in his 40s, rebranding himself with boxy T-shirts, jiu-jitsu medals, and hip-hop styled gold chains. Sam Altman, just 39, is leading the AI revolution and reshaping global power structures. Across industries, young leaders are not just present—they're shaping the future.
Crockett, age 44 and a civil rights attorney, is sharp, media-savvy, and unafraid to speak plainly. She represents the cultural zeitgeist just as much as these men. Yet she is marginalized in her own party, passed over for leadership roles, and left vulnerable to attacks from opponents without the full-throated support of her colleagues. It's telling — especially in a party where the average age of leadership continues to climb into the 80s. Multiple members, including Crockett's predecessor Rep. Eddie Bernice Johnson (D-Texas), have died in office without effectively grooming successors.
Why would Democrats sideline Crockett, clinging to appeals to 'moderates,' while the opposition isn't concerned with moderation at all? Republicans aren't running on moderation, they're running on winning majorities. These questions desperately need answers.
Democrats must also grapple with their brand of respectability politics — where they speak truth to power in public, but reserve criticism for people in their own circles whom they deem unfit or unworthy behind closed doors. These whispers happen in places like Martha's Vineyard and elite social gatherings. Beaches and luxuries their constituents will probably never see or ever care enough to go to. It's happening to Crockett now.
For those raised in the Black church, this is familiar: pastors refusing to step down, never mentoring the next generation, and leaving pulpits and communities in disarray. Crockett's situation is not unique, but it is urgent. She doesn't need to be controlled — she needs to be counseled, empowered, and amplified.
Because Crockett is not an outlier or an agitator. She is the base. She is the moment.
She speaks for working-class women juggling child care, school pickup, and $16-an-hour jobs with no benefits, driving uber on the weekend. She speaks for young Black men launching LLCs, tired of performative progressivism and poverty politics. She understands the frustration of a generation that grew up quoting Jay-Z and saw Trump glamorized in hip-hop lyrics long before he entered politics.
She screams for them so they can keep going to work and getting their checks with some measure of hope and pride, knowing someone is fighting for them and isn't afraid.
Whether you like her delivery or not, she's speaking a language people understand — and that's exactly what the party needs. Look at Bishop T.D. Jakes. Last month, he shocked many by announcing his retirement and installing his daughter, Pastor Sarah Jakes Roberts, as his successor. Sarah — a one-time teen mom whose sermons now go viral weekly — has become a spiritual voice for a new generation. By passing the torch while still alive, Bishop Jakes showed a rare understanding: Leadership is legacy, not ego.
The Democratic Party should take note. Crockett doesn't need to be molded into an old-school moderate. She needs mentorship, media support, and the mic.
If the party doesn't embrace her — and the millions like her — they'll keep losing. Not just elections, but the future.
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