logo
Democrat warns US progressives against moving toward the center: ‘It lost me the election'

Democrat warns US progressives against moving toward the center: ‘It lost me the election'

The Guardian5 hours ago
India Walton has a warning message for progressive Democrats during Donald Trump's second presidency: don't water down your politics to win over the establishment.
The Democratic socialist who stunned the Democratic party by defeating a four-term incumbent mayor in the Buffalo, New York, primary in 2021 believes moderating her leftwing message cost her the general election. It's a lesson that carries new weight now that Zohran Mamdani secured his own victory in New York City's Democratic mayoral primary earlier in the summer and inspired thousands of other progressive candidates to also run for office.
After disrupting the political base in the US by beating sitting mayor Byron Brown in Buffalo's Democratic primary, she says she pivoted toward the center – and lost.
'Moderating is what got us here,' said Walton, now a senior strategist at RootsAction, referring to Donald Trump's return to the White House. 'I believe that moderating is what lost me ultimately the election in 2021.
'I pivoted fairly quickly … to try and integrate myself into the party, because I thought that was the way to build a broad-based coalition,' she reflected. 'It sort of ate away from our message from the inside out.'
After initially opposing charter schools in the primary to win the Buffalo Teachers Federation endorsement, Walton later told business leaders she supported 'school choice' – and lost the union's backing for the general election as a result. She also distanced herself from the 'defund the police' movement.
Shortly after Walton won the primary that year, the establishment and investor-aligned Brown mounted an unorthodox write-in campaign and won, even though his race was marked by possible campaign finance violations including receiving contributions from real estate corporations in defiance of election law.. Brown, an ally of the former New York governor Andrew Cuomo and a former New York Democratic party chair, would step down in 2024 to serve as president and CEO of a western New York off-track betting company.
But in 2021, there was widespread fear over Walton's socialist tendencies, with the city even researching whether or not it should entirely abandon its mayoral system over her primary win.
These days, Walton argues Democrats lost working-class voters by abandoning populist economics. 'I think a part of the reason how we got a second Donald Trump presidency is that the Democrats have not had a message that appeals to working-class and poor people.'
The establishment resists such policies because they are 'beholden to corporations and billionaires', she added. 'It's not the message they want to hear, but it is the message that is resonant with the voters.'
Walton's analysis runs counter to some Democratic strategists who argue the party moved too far left after 2024's losses. One postmortem survey by the Progressive Policy Institute showed 68% of working-class voters believed the Democratic party had embraced overly progressive positions. Soon after Trump's election win and swing state sweep, the New York Times columnist Ezra Klein argued that the Biden-era Democratic party reflected 'a culture in which nobody is saying no to the groups at any level of American Democratic politics'.
Yet last year, progressive ballot measures thrived even as Democratic candidates struggled. Voters across the country approved minimum wage increases, paid leave expansions, and other progressive economic policies, with red states embracing progressive measures even while supporting Trump, like Missouri where voters passed a $15 minimum wage and paid sick leave, or Nebraska where voters approved guaranteed paid time off. A July 2025 poll by the Democratic pollster Celinda Lake for progressive network Way to Win found that Democratic voters who skipped 2024 want candidates more like the independent Vermont senator Bernie Sanders and New York member of congress Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, suggesting the party's problem may be insufficient progressivism rather than too much.
One example Walton pointed to was the debate on 'defund the police' that did damage to many progressive and centrist campaigns. The real message, which Walton said had been distorted, was about shifting police funding toward social services and mental health care.
The slogan ultimately became a political liability. In 2020, centrist Democrats warned it had cost them over a dozen swing district House seats after Joe Biden's presidential win and in Minneapolis, voters rejected a measure to overhaul policing even after George Floyd's murder. In a pre-Mamdani New York City, Eric Adams ran explicitly against 'defund the police' and won.
Now Mamdani – a democratic socialist assemblyman who defeated Cuomo with 56% in the final ranked-choice count – has given progressives fresh momentum all over again. His victory generated immediate enthusiasm, with Run for Something, a progressive group that urges young candidates to seek public office, noting that 10,000 people nationwide signed up to pursue public office within two weeks of his win.
Walton sees opportunity in younger voters who don't follow traditional political voting patterns. 'Millennials are the first generation who are not becoming more conservative as they age.'
Her advice to progressive candidates is simple: resist the pressure to compromise.
'People hear hope in 'we're going to prioritize working-class people',' she said. 'People hear hope in 'I'm not going to capitulate to the establishment and negotiate all of our power that we've built'. This is the right time.'
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

New pics of Trump holding court in Oval Office branded ‘embarrassing' as world leaders sit around his desk: ‘Like schoolchildren'
New pics of Trump holding court in Oval Office branded ‘embarrassing' as world leaders sit around his desk: ‘Like schoolchildren'

The Independent

time29 minutes ago

  • The Independent

New pics of Trump holding court in Oval Office branded ‘embarrassing' as world leaders sit around his desk: ‘Like schoolchildren'

New pictures showing Donald Trump sitting in the Oval Office in front of major world leaders has been criticized as an "embarrassing" power play by the president, in what should have been a display of global unity. Some on social media noted that the set up, with Trump behind the Resolute Desk and his European counterparts on chairs opposite him, presented the president as hosting a bunch of 'unruly schoolchildren.' The president was joined for the photo-op by leaders including British prime minister Sir Keir Starmer, French president Emmanual Macron, German Chancellor Freidrich Merz, Italian prime minister Giorgia Meloni and Finnish president Alexander Stubb. Also in attendance were European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen, NATO Secretary-General Mark Rutte, and Ukrainian president Volodymyr Zelensky. Another photo showed a smiling Trump posing with a new golf club, gifted to him by Zelensky. However, the meeting of the circled leaders drew the ire of social media users, with some commenting that the staging and White House mantra of of 'peace through strength' was 'deeply disrespectful to U.S. history itself.' 'Permenant peace is never truly obtained through strength. It may hold for a while under pressure, but it won't last,' wrote one user. 'What a breathtakingly rude, narcissistic asshole,' another said. 'Instead of a conference table where everyone can meet equally, Chump lined them up like unruly school children in a row with himself as the authority figure. Chump can just f*** all the way off.' Others questioned how the leaders, who came to Washington D.C. as 'equals' had allowed such a belittling set up. 'Embarrassing,' wrote one user, with another going further, writing 'I cannot believe they let Trump seat them like a bunch of schoolchildren. 'Do none of these 'leaders' have any testosterone whatsoever or PR teams that can approve/reject seating arrangements. Most embarrassing thing I've ever seen for the EU.'

Poll: Trump hits lowest approval rating this year
Poll: Trump hits lowest approval rating this year

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Poll: Trump hits lowest approval rating this year

Support for Donald Trump has tumbled as his term has progressed, with the latest poll showing his approval rating at its lowest point all year. The latest Reuters/Ipsos poll of nearly 4,500 Americans found that the president is carrying a 40 percent approval rating. That level of support, the lowest of the president's second term, ties Trump's approval rating from the same pollsters just weeks ago in late July. Trump's disapproval rating ticked slightly down in the latest survey to 54 percent. The 79-year-old president's disapproval stood at 56 percent as of July 27. It is a seven-point drop in support for the president from the beginning of his term, when Trump had a 47 percent approval rating. At this point in his term, former President Joe Biden maintained a 50 percent approval rating, according to a Reuters/Ipsos poll taken in August 2021. The slumping approval rating comes amid signs that the U.S. economy is weakening and high-stakes diplomatic negotiations with Russia and Ukraine to end their ongoing war continue. Over half of the respondents, 54 percent, including a quarter of Republicans, said they believe Trump is too closely aligned with Russia. Notably, Trump bled support among Hispanics as he oversees a sweeping nationwide immigration crackdown that has led to at least 300,00 repatriations. Just 32 percent of Hispanics in the latest Reuters/Ipsos survey approved of the president's performance. Support for Trump came predominantly from registered Republicans. Only 42 percent of respondents voiced support for the president's performance on crime, and 43 percent said he is doing a good job on immigration. Other recent polls, meanwhile, have shown more support for the president's job performance. According to the RealClearPolitics polling average, Trump's approval sits at 46 percent while his disapproval rating is 51 percent.

Heiress who sold CBS News says she was secretly pleased by Trump attacks on its slanted broadcasts
Heiress who sold CBS News says she was secretly pleased by Trump attacks on its slanted broadcasts

Daily Mail​

time30 minutes ago

  • Daily Mail​

Heiress who sold CBS News says she was secretly pleased by Trump attacks on its slanted broadcasts

An heiress who used to own CBS's parent company Paramount says she welcomed Donald Trump suing the broadcaster over alleged biased coverage on its flagship news show. Shari Redstone, 71, conceded to The New York Times that 'We needed more balance' - although she and the president had been offended by different broadcasts. Trump sued CBS after claiming the network's flagship current affairs show 60 Minutes had deceptively edited a Kamala Harris interview to make her look better. Meanwhile, Redstone said she'd been offended by a separate 60 Minutes episode on the Israel-Hamas war she felt was too slanted in favor of the Palestinian cause. She said: 'Part of me thought, maybe Trump could accomplish what I never got done.' Redstone, the daughter of the late entertainment magnate Sumner Redstone, says she realized she wanted to sell Paramount in the wake of Hamas ' October 7 2023 massacre in Israel, that saw 1,200 Israelis murdered. She explained: 'Once that happened, I wanted out. I wanted to support Israel, and address issues around antisemitism and racism.' Shortly after that, another heir called David Ellison contacted her asking if she'd sell to Skydance, the production company he'd set up. Redstone closed the sale for $8 billion last month and took home an estimated $2.8 billion of that payout. That deal was struck around the same time CBS settled with Trump for $16 million over the Kamala Harris interview he said was deceptive. Lawyers said the network had strong grounds to contest Trump's claims. But Redstone's sale of Paramount had to be rubber-stamped by Trump's Federal Communications Commission - with the settlement seen by critics as a dirty deal to grease the wheels. Redstone told The Times that she found 60 Minutes veteran journalist Lesley Stahl's criticism of the settlement 'particularly hurtful.' The heiress insisted she'd just wanted to get the deal done to help give CBS News a secure future. 'We needed more balance,' Redstone went on to tell the Times, suggesting such segments - including others that were no specified were slanted. 'Part of me thought, maybe Trump could accomplish what I never got done' Simultaneously, Redstone was secretly thyroid battling cancer. The billionairess, who trained as a social worker, underwent surgery in May after the disease spread to her coal cords. Asked how she came the decision, Redstone said: 'My legacy was to create security for my family and to put the company in good hands.' She added how despite 'many challenges... we did what we set out to do.'

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store