No, I don't think we are. I think we're pointing out that slogans and branding have failed. Big money has failed, and even big media has failed. Something new is at work in the democratic process, whereby these superficialities are no longer working. Some suggest it's the effect of the internet, which breaks the monopoly on political propaganda...and that may be part of the truth. But if that's all it is, then there's also no way to improve the prospects of the DP.
Exactly so. But for the electoral process to engage that, a party needs a package, a story about all that that promises actual betterment. And people have to see and agree that the policies and persons involved in that story are plausible to help them with the economy, or housing, or whatever they really care about.But when people are facing challenges like stagnant wages, housing instability, and high healthcare costs, it’s not enough for a party to tell them a better story. What they need is tangible, visible improvement in their lives, and that means tackling those root conditions, not just addressing their symptoms.
If that's right, then the problem would be that the people didn't believe one party's story. And the opposition's story, or persons, were somehow much more plausible to them. And we should probably unpack all that, and tell the DP why their narrative failed as badly as it did, within that electoral process, and better still, how they might make their story more credible.
Yes, but that will only aid the electoral process if there is also adequate messaging within a plausible story, by plausible agents. People have to not just find their lives improved, but also know who did it, and how. After all, the DP is shortly not going to be in power. Their current track record, their last batch of policies, and the stories they told about those, and the people they offered as electable have failed resoundingly to convince the people. I don't think the most ardent Democrat could doubt that. And I think anybody who has a stake in the Democrat Party's future is going to want to hide his head in the sand about that, either.In a broader sense, this means that, rather than framing political strategies around what sounds appealing, a more effective system would be structured to resolve issues from the ground up.
Well, they haven't improved these things in the last four years, manifestly; or at least we can say the electorate hasn't thought of what they've done as the kind of improvement the DP needs to do. Their promises and policies also clearly did not convince; and we could wonder if their personnel were entirely convincing, as well. That's kind of indisputable, given the result: something went very, very wrong.The focus wouldn’t just be on winning voter support; it would be on creating real, sustained progress on things like economic equity, accessible education, healthcare, and infrastructure. Policies built to address these foundational issues would make party lines and campaign promises feel less like a tug-of-war over voter loyalty and more like a collective drive toward societal improvement.
But you're right about the need for a more plausible "drive toward societal improvement." And lacking incumbency, the DP will have to regroup around new promises about those things. So we might as what sorts of policies, promises, people and narratives might bring the DP back into electoral competitiveness. Or we could just let them make the same mistakes, of course...which would hand the next election to their opponents, and also mean the two-party electoral process was really only a one-party electoral process: but I'm not sure that's in the democratic interest.
Of course, of course. Yes, I agree.So, yes, Democrats can—and probably should—rethink their narrative. But maybe the deeper question is how to build systems that serve people directly, through concrete, measurable impacts. That’s where the difference between meaningful change and mere rhetoric really shows.
But "concrete, measurable impacts" are easier for an incumbent party than for an aspiring one. And in the new session, the DP is going to be in the position of the aspirants, not the incumbents. The Repubs will have to perform better that the Dems, obviously, if they want to retain their public favour; but the Dems will have to operate from the position of those with limited leverage or opportunity to produce the "concrete, measurable impacts" you mention, and saddled with at least the public perception of a rather poor record on that score. So everything will depend on the quality of that narrative. Voters will have to believe, sight unseen, that the Dems plan is better than that of their opposition, their people more capable, their policies more likely to create desirable results, and so forth.
But, as they say, "the devil is in the details" on that. So we might turn to asking exactly WHAT narrative the Dems should be looking to create.