Tools
Change country:

The left’s comforting myth about why Harris lost

Vice President Kamala Harris pauses while speaking onstage as she concedes the election, at Howard University on November 6, 2024, in Washington, DC. | Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

On November 5, Americans elevated a reactionary authoritarian to the presidency — again.

After attempting to overturn an election, fomenting an insurrection, becoming a convicted criminal, and baselessly accusing an immigrant community of eating house pets, Donald Trump not only won a second lease on the White House, but he did so with a plurality of the popular vote — while Republicans took control of both congressional chambers. 

Liberals may be feeling a sense of déjà vu. But this is not 2017 all over again. It is something worse.

Over the past eight years, Trump has remade the Republican Party in his image. In Congress, his intraparty critics have almost all decamped for the private sector or knelt to kiss his ring. In the executive branch, the “adults” are no longer “in the room”: Awed by his own power and unprepared to staff an administration, Trump leaned on many relatively mainstream advisers in his first term. This time around, he and his allies have assembled a cadre of loyalists, some of whom have won cabinet nominations (alongside some more conventional Republicans). 

Meanwhile, conservatives have consolidated their grip on the Supreme Court, slashed the Democrats’ advantage with Hispanic voters, and fortified the GOP’s strength with the non-college-educated electorate, realignments that threatened the Democratic Party’s capacity to wield federal power.

All this amounts to a catastrophe for anyone who values liberal democracy, egalitarian economic policy, and social equality for all marginalized groups. As someone who has spent the past decade advocating for more expansionary immigration policies, a larger social safety net, criminal justice reform, and decarbonization, it is difficult to see my country embrace a man who evinces contempt for all of those causes.

In the face of this calamity, Democrats must develop a clear-eyed understanding of how they got here and chart a plausible path back to the country they want to live in.

This newsletter — The Rebuild — aims to aid in that project. In weekly installments, I’ll try to offer some insight into how Democrats lost their national majority, as well as what we — people who care about advancing progressive change — must do to become more effective moving forward.

Answering those questions will require Democrats to analyze their predicament with open minds. If we seek ideologically comforting explanations for the party’s problems — rather than empirically sound ones — the coalition will march deeper into the wilderness. 

Unfortunately, in the wake of Harris’s loss, virtually every Democratic faction has produced its share of motivated reasoning. In future newsletters, I plan to take issue with some centrists’ analysis of the party’s difficulties. But today, I want to explain why I worry that the left is allowing wishful thinking to cloud its vision of political reality. 

Since November 5, some progressives have drawn a sweeping lesson from Donald Trump’s second victory: Harris’s loss proves that Democrats gain little from “moderation” or “centrism” and must “embrace radical policies” in order to compete. I admire many of the writers making this argument. But their confidence in this narrative strikes me as wildly unfounded.

It is true that Harris pivoted to the center on border security, crime, and, to a lesser extent, economics. There are plenty of sound arguments — both moral and political — against Democrats moderating on specific issues. Yet it’s hard to see how anyone could be confident that Harris lost because she moderated, much less that her loss proved that moderation is electorally counterproductive as a rule. 

To name just a few reasons for doubting those premises:

  • Harris actually did better where both she and Donald Trump held campaign rallies and aired TV advertisements than she did in the rest of the country. Thus, if Harris’s problem was her moderate messaging, it is odd that she won a higher share of the vote in the places that were more exposed to that messaging, despite the fact that such areas were also inundated by pro-Trump ads. 
  • In a September poll from Gallup, 51 percent of voters described Harris as “too liberal,” while just 6 percent deemed her “too conservative.”
  • Harris had been a liberal senator and took many left-wing positions during the 2020 Democratic primary. She was attacked relentlessly by the Trump campaign on that basis. It’s hard to see how one could determine that it was Harris’s moderate messaging, rather than her progressive background, that was more damaging to her prospects. What we know, however, is that her opponent’s political advisers sought to highlight the latter, not the former. 
  • Across the wealthy world, parties that presided over inflation have been losing at the ballot box, irrespective of their political leanings, a fact that raises doubts about whether any grand ideological lesson can be drawn from Harris’s defeat.

My aim here is not to argue that Democrats must pivot to the center on all issues. I don’t think they should. I do think that the party needs to moderate its image nationally, if only to better compete for Senate control. But I’m still gathering my thoughts on how precisely they should pursue that task and will elaborate on them in future newsletters.  

For now, my point is simply that there is little basis for confidence that Harris lost due to excessive moderation, or that Democrats would benefit electorally from becoming broadly more left-wing. The fact that many on the left nevertheless evince such certainty is therefore disconcerting. 

Being progressive, in the best sense of that term, means putting the interests of the most vulnerable above one’s own comfort — whether material or ideological. And right now, America’s most disempowered constituencies have a strong interest in Democrats ousting reactionaries from power. If the party substitutes wishful thinking for unblinkered analysis, they will have a harder time accomplishing that task.


Read full article on: vox.com
‘Why should I leave them anything?’ Estranged mom won’t give kids a cent
There's this woman on TikTok called Doormat Mom, and she's stirring the pot with some pretty controversial stuff about her estranged kids.
7 m
nypost.com
Ski bro gets stupidly close to huge bear at Whistler resort
This dude is rawr-ing for trouble. At a ski resort in Whistler, Canada, guests were filmed getting dangerously close to a large black bear that was roaming the property at night. In the wild clip, one gutsy guy even growled back after the massive beast lunged toward him.    
8 m
nypost.com
Emotional bodycam footage of officer attempting to resuscitate Laken Riley shown in court: ‘I’m not getting any pulse’
The judge in Georgia nursing student Laken Riley’s murder trial issued a warning to the courtroom about graphic body cam footage about to be shown -- prompting several to get up and leave and family members to cover their eyes.
8 m
nypost.com
NYU Langone pleaded with Hochul for congestion pricing exemptions for vulnerable patients, staff
Leaders at NYU Langone Health urged Gov. Kathy Hochul to craft congestion pricing exemptions for burdened patients and staff — a searing plea that went unheeded days later when she announced the hated Manhattan toll program’s return. The letter sent Monday — and exclusively obtained by The Post — warned Hochul that NYU Langone patients...
8 m
nypost.com
This week on "Sunday Morning" (November 17)
A look at the features for this week's broadcast of the Emmy-winning program, hosted by Jane Pauley.
9 m
cbsnews.com
Billy Bob Thornton Shares Awkward Moment With Ana Navarro On ‘The View’ After She Notices A Key On His Belt: “Ana, You Know What That Key Is For”
Suffice it to say, Navarro did not know what the key was for.
nypost.com
What Is The ‘Silo’ Season 2 Release Time? Episode Guide, Schedule, and More
Are you ready to unpack more Silo mysteries?
nypost.com
You don’t want to miss this early Black Friday deal on hearing aids
A deal you need to hear about — that'll provide better hearing.
nypost.com
NYers mourn Van Ritshie, longtime voice of LIRR, Metro North announcements: ‘That voice is the Long Island Rail Road’
He’s left a gap in the hearts of commuters. Van Ritshie, who for three decades cautioned MTA riders to “watch the gap” as the official announcement voice on LIRR and Metro North trains, died at 80 last week — and passengers were still in mourning Thursday. “When I heard that the announcer passed, my heart...
nypost.com
Blue city residents say migrant surge fueled Trump gains: 'Democratic Party does not own us'
President-elect Donald Trump made historic gains in certain deep-blue areas of the nation, and some residents argue that support stems from the ongoing migrant surge.
foxnews.com
Jamie Dimon says bankers ‘dancing in the street’ on hopes Trump will loosen regulations
The longtime chief executive – who assumed the role in 2006 – criticized years of stringent regulations on the banking sector.
nypost.com
Jenna Bush Hager Reveals Why She Didn’t Transfer To Yale University To Study With Her Sister: “That Could Lead To Some Real Disfunction”
The Today host said she wanted to transfer after having "so much fun" when visiting her sister at Yale.
nypost.com
RFK Jr. wants to 'Make America Healthy Again.' He could face a lot of pushback
RFK Jr. wants to tackle chronic disease. Despite controversial views on vaccines, his focus on healthy food and taking on special interests may find broad support — and face political headwinds.
npr.org
Chicago Tribune criticizes Harris campaign for paying massive sums to Oprah Winfrey, other celebs: Report
The Chicago Tribune criticized Vice President Kamala Harris' failed presidential campaign for reportedly paying out campaign cash to Oprah Winfrey and other celebrities.
foxnews.com
The election's biggest loser, Democrat meltdowns, and more from Fox News Opinion
Read the latest from Fox News Opinion & watch videos from Sean Hannity, Raymond Arroyo & more.
foxnews.com
Ashley Darby on divorce updates with Michael, Karen Huger’s DUI and more ‘RHOP’ drama
Ashley Darby stopped by the Page Six studio to chat with “Virtual Reali-Tea” co-hosts Danny Murphy and Evan Real. The “Real Housewives of Potomac” star shared her thoughts and opinions on Karen Huger’s DUI and gave an update in her divorce from estranged husband Michael Darby, while also spilling more tea about the cast drama....
nypost.com
NYC Mayor Eric Adams Is Grilled By ‘The View’ About “Embracing” Donald Trump In Tense Interview
Adams insisted he was defending Trump against incendiary rhetoric.
nypost.com
One of Fiction’s Most Popular Detectives Finally Has His Own TV Show. It Nails His Appeal.
James Patterson is not a great writer, but Prime Video’s Cross understands what he got right.
slate.com
Nov 15: CBS News 24/7, 10am ET
Trump picks Robert F. Kennedy Jr. for Health and Human Services secretary and Doug Burgum as secretary of Interior; Mike Tyson and Jake Paul face off in highly anticipated fight.
cbsnews.com
NY nursing home execs settle for $45M after stealing nearly twice as much through patient neglect, wretched conditions: AG
Warning: Distressing Content Executives at a series of New York nursing homes accused of an $83 million scheme to fleece Medicare, Medicaid and the seniors in their care have agreed to a settlement with state Attorney General Letitia James, her office announced. The co-owners of Centers for Care, Kenneth Rozenberg and Daryl Hagler, will be...
nypost.com
In 'All We Imagine as Light,' the big-city blues yield to a sublime sisterhood
Winner of the Cannes Grand Prix, writer-director Payal Kapadia's intimate spell of a movie shows a complex side of India that many urbanites will relate with.
latimes.com
‘Martha’ director hits back at Martha Stewart’s harsh criticism of documentary about her life
Stewart criticized the film’s final moments, which show her tending to her home grounds and gardens, as well as the movie's score and how it covered her 2004 prison stint.
nypost.com
Donna Kelce says Taylor Swift might be too 'busy' to join in on family Thanksgiving plans
Donna Kelce, mother of Kansas City Chiefs tight end Travis Kelce, said Thursday that she does not think Taylor Swift will be joining the family in their Thanksgiving plans this year.
foxnews.com
Billionaire LA Times owner goes on Fox News, doubles down on vow to bring balance to left-leaning paper: ‘We have conflated news and opinion’
The billionaire owner of the Los Angeles Times said his paper has “conflated news and opinion” and doubled down on his promise to bring in more conservative voices to balance the left-leaning publication. Dr. Patrick Soon-Shiong — who sparked an internal revolt over his decision to kill the paper’s endorsement of Vice President Kamala Harris...
nypost.com
Bonnie Hunt credits her nursing degree with helping her navigate Hollywood excesses
"The one gift patients always give me is perspective," she shared to The Post.
nypost.com
Medical examiner says subway madman had drugs in system in Marine vet’s chokehold trial
Manhattan District Attorney Alvin Bragg's office's last witness against Marine vet Daniel Penny is the medical examiner who conducted Jordan Neely's autopsy.
foxnews.com
How Shel Talmy created one of the most thrilling sounds in rock
The crunch and immediacy of the Kinks’ and the Who’s early songs? That was Shel Talmy.
washingtonpost.com
Influencer charged with DUI fights to get back her pet monkey — who was found sick and malnourished
An influencer is fighting to get back her internet-famous monkey, Jorgie Boy — even though the unpermitted pet was found deathly sick and malnourished in a car crash where his owner says she had passed out drunk. Brandi Botello, 29, had her 3-year-old spider monkey with her over the weekend when they were in a...
nypost.com
Carolyn Hax: Resources for getting help
Advice columnist Carolyn Hax recommends resources for readers who are looking for support.
washingtonpost.com
How to watch the Tyson vs. Paul fight tonight
Jake Paul and Mike Tyson are set to fight in a major professional boxing match tonight. Here's how to watch and what time the bout starts.
cbsnews.com
Make snow removal easy this year with these 8 winter necessities
Tackle winter snowstorms with ease when you’ve got the right shovel, ice melt, a snowblower and other winter necessities.
foxnews.com
73rd Miss Universe Competition kicks off with dazzling National Costumes: photos
Contestants show of their National Costumes and Swimwear at the Miss Universe Competition in Mexico City, November 14, 2024.
nypost.com
Top-searched travel destinations on Google, social media: report
A travel company released a report revealing popular destinations by analyzing social media posts and Google searches. From the U.S. to Japan and more, see what people are searching for.
foxnews.com
Expectations for Biden meeting with Xi Jinping at APEC summit
President Biden is in Peru for the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit with his upcoming meeting with Xi Jinping at the summit generating significant interest. CBS News correspondent Natalie Brand has the latest.
cbsnews.com
What time is Mike Tyson vs. Jake Paul? How to watch tonight’s fight on Netflix
You won't want to miss the much-anticipated showdown between the YouTuber-turned-pro boxer and retired heavyweight world champ.
nypost.com
What Page Six editors are shopping at Bloomingdale’s this holiday season
When it comes to holiday gift shopping, Bloomingdale’s has it in the big brown bag.
nypost.com
This spiced pumpkin punch celebrates the season, no alcohol required
This holiday season, try this booze-free punch, inspired by pumpkin drinks popular the Caribbean.
washingtonpost.com
California removes slur targeting Indigenous women from location names
Officials have approved the removal of the derogatory term "squaw" from over 30 geographic features and place names on California lands.
latimes.com
College football Week 12 predictions: Colorado vs. Utah, more picks against the spread
Howie Kussoy, also known as the Pigskin Profit, is taking the underdog in Colorado-Utah on Saturday.
nypost.com
‘Silo’ Season 2 Premiere Recap: Silo$
Moon river...
nypost.com
Priest stabbed in the face during Mass as religion-based hate crime is on the rise worldwide
A priest stabbed in the face during Mass is one of the most recent cases of a religion-based hate crime, which is one the rise around the globe, though Jews are most often victims of the attacks.
foxnews.com
The Promise I Sunday on 60 Minutes
Twenty-three years later, over a thousand families are still waiting for news of loved ones lost on 9/11. Scott Pelley looks at how efforts to search for and identify their remains have never stopped. Sunday.
cbsnews.com
What FTC Chair Lina Khan’s exit could do for the media landscape
Lina Khan took the FTC consumer protection agency mandate to new and dangerous levels.
nypost.com
Still paying off last year's holiday debt? Here's what to do now.
If you haven't paid off last year's holiday credit card bills, use these strategies to tackle it now.
cbsnews.com
How CNN might find its way to the auction block
Analysts believe CNN makes what looks like a decent amount of money, around $750 million this year. Sounds good until you realize that's down from over $1 billion in 2020.
nypost.com
Elon Musk expands lawsuit against OpenAI, blasts ‘ill-gotten gains’ with Microsoft
Like Musk's original August complaint, it accused OpenAI and its CEO, Sam Altman, of violating contract provisions by putting profits ahead of the public good in the push to advance AI.
nypost.com
This captivating sea creature could dominate Earth if humans become extinct: expert
It may not be the robots that will rule Earth when humanity goes extinct.
nypost.com
Keke Palmer lists Brooklyn penthouse for $2.99M ahead of her buzzy memoir release
It's a busy time for largely LA-based Keke Palmer, who not only has a new book out next week -- but is looking to part ways with her Williamsburg apartment.
nypost.com