Shattering the false dichotomy: Progressives must mobilize and persuade and get better at each – Salon
The 2016 election is more than three months past, and we live each day with its apocalyptic consequences. We need to fight President Donald Trump and what he stands for on multiple fronts. We need to fight the Muslim ban, the global gag order, the border wall with Mexico, rollbacks of consumer protections and health care, and a host of ethical issues. We must link all these fights to a political narrative aimed at restoring progressive power in this falls elections in Virginia and New Jersey, and taking back statehouses and Congress in 2018.
But as we do that, were still debating what hit us last November. Reliable data is beginning to come in, and as always, there is a cottage industry of consultants eager to interpret it and chart the way forward (often without reference to how wrongheaded much of their advice and predictions proved to be in the last cycle). As the leader of a group of progressive donors, I have sat in at least a dozen election post-mortem discussions and read a stack of reports and PowerPoint decks. Ive learned a lot.
I dont pretend to have all the answers, and am distrustful of those who think they do, since humility is demanded of us after a stunning upset almost no one predicted. If your diagnosis is completely in sync with whatever you devoutly believed the day before the election, or translates into a single magic bullet or in the case of looking backward, a single culprit you should think again.
The way I look at it, at the presidential level the 2016 election was like the classic Agatha Christie murder mystery (I wont say which one and spoil the novel for those who havent read it) in which there are a dozen suspects in this case, James Comey, misogyny, over-reliance on data and ads and underinvestment in the field, lack of an economic message, a flawed candidate, voter suppression laws, Russian interference, fake news and a host of other factors. In the end, each of them turns out to have taken a turn stabbing, poisoning, shooting, bludgeoning and strangling the victim.
When you win the popular vote convincingly but lose an election by about 60,000 votes in three close states, this is almost certainly true. (My own favorite culprit is that you can draw a clear forensic line from the 2010 election of right-wing Republican governors in Wisconsin and Michigan and their successful efforts to weaken the power of labor in their states to the razor-thin margins that shifted those states into the Trump column in 2016.)
There is one emerging conclusion that could very well become the dominant narrative about the 2016 election, and critical for elections to come, that I believe deserves much more analysis and context before it becomes set into stone, because the consequences are very high. It is that mobilization by which is meant turning out voters in the progressive base, such as communities of color, women and millennials has fallen short. We must shift to persuasion to start winning again; that is, talking with voters who dont agree with us, and who may have voted for Trump or third-party candidates.
Its not that I think persuasion is unnecessary or mobilization is sufficient I dont. But if we are not clear by what we mean by each, and if we dont avoid creating a false dichotomy between the two, the progressive base will fracture and well move backwards, not forward.
Heres what I mean. A mobilization strategy, which Hillary Clintons campaign largely seems to have followed, building on the two general election successes of Barack Obama, emphasizes the New American Majority of blacks, Latinos and Asians, along with young voters and a large cohort of unmarried women who, when they vote, tend to vote for progressive candidates. It requires investments in voter registration, because many in those communities are not yet on the voting rolls. If the registration gap could be narrowed or eliminated, the thinking goes, you can lock in a progressive majority for some time. It requires investments in turnout, knocking on doors, motivating voters, and getting them to the polls. But given the result last November, we now wonder, of course, whether the Obama strategy requires Barack Obama, or someone like him, who can inspire and galvanize.
Too often, a mobilization strategy presumes the allegiance and even enthusiasm of a voting group. But no one likes to be taken for granted. When candidates and parties speak to the issues most important to communities police violence, or immigration reform, or childcare, or student debt passion and turnout rise. The same appears true with some of the disaffected voters Trump turned out, who saw a candidate voicing their grievances with the elites of both political parties.
Further, to argue that mobilization is insufficient to win presumes that it has been fully backed with the necessary resources, but thats just not the case. Some key electoral field efforts in the past cycle moved more money to communities of color than in the past, but as someone who tried to raise money for black and Latino civic engagement, I know that money for those efforts came, as it almost always does, too little and too late, and in any case, is rarely sustained between elections, perpetuating a boom and bust cycle that saps the fight to build permanent political power.
Persuasion seems like common sense its what elections are all about, isnt it? But it, too, is contested ground. Many in the communities of the New American Majority and on the left of the Democratic Party fear, from the experience of the post-Reagan/Bill Clinton era, that its a synonym for triangulation for moving to the center, and muting or abandoning key progressive positions. After years of chronic underinvestment in low-income women and men of color, the progressive discovery of white working class men in the Rust Belt feels galling to many, particularly when a majority of college-educated white men and women, who are hardly marginalized, contributed heavily to Trumps Electoral College victory. For black voters whose communities are still feeling the ravages of a drug epidemic that was treated (by Democrats no less than Republicans) by prison-building, the sudden empathy with largely white communities disrupted by opioid abuse seems, well, it seems like racism.
Moreover, while progressives have invested much in mobilization strategies for those who are with us, so far we know too little about what works to persuade those who are not. Hundreds of millions of dollars poured into 30-second ads that pollute the discourse and line the pockets of consultants and television stations are not the answer. We have to step up investment in smart and targeted digital strategies, where we seem to have been bested by the Trump campaign last fall, and return to good old fashioned, year-in, year-out, face-to-face organizing in communities. Because listening, and the relationships built from it, matter. Powerfully.
A true New American Majority must have room for those left out of the economy no matter their race or geography. The pain of an unemployed coal miner, steelworker or other casualties of globalization is no less real than that of a struggling fast food worker or caregiver. It makes no excuses for the racism and misogyny fueling a too-large bloc of Trumps voters or even for those who swallowed their disgust at racism and misogyny to vote for him anyway to say that a shared interest in good jobs, a strong social safety net and functioning roads and bridges can forge an electoral coalition that will be powerful. Its an arithmetic issue, to be sure, but more fundamentally, its a moral issue. A progressive vision has to be one that most can see themselves in.
Its not that we dont know how to do this, or how to talk about this. Organizing groups like Working America, PICO and Peoples Action know how to have deep and ongoing conversations with white working class voters and most importantly, how to listen as do labor leaders like Mary Kay Henry of SEIU and such thought leaders and activists as Van Jones and Demos President Heather McGhee.
Such winning progressive candidates in purple states around the country as Senators Al Franken in Minnesota, Tammy Baldwin in Wisconsin and Sherrod Brown in Ohio, not to mention the new Democratic governor of North Carolina, Roy Cooper, have shown that strong adherence to core progressive values on human rights and justice issues can and must be coupled with an inclusive economic vision.
Donald Trump peeled off voters in key states who felt betrayed by the elites of both parties. Those voters will be up for grabs when they realize as we must drive home to them that they were conned. The extremist and corrupt government that Trump is installing, from his family on down, will line its own pockets and dole out more hardship for working people. As that becomes clear, millions could turn away from politics completely or be ready to listen to a candidate or party really standing up for them.
No less than skeptical Rust Belt white men, voters of color and women and young people must be listened to and delivered to before they can be mobilized, and campaigns have to start treating them as agents, not targets. The persuasion of Rust Belt voters in economic distress must keep faith with progressive human rights values yet lead with credible remedies for economic pain, delivered by authentic messengers.
In the end, we must both persuade and mobilize. We have fallen short in both. Starting now, we have to do better. If we dont, well be embroiled in a potentially toxic debate that could do as much harm to progressives as any right-wing Republican.
Read the original post:
Shattering the false dichotomy: Progressives must mobilize and persuade and get better at each - Salon
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WAVE News - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WSAW - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WBAY - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KCTV - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WLOX - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WWBT - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - First Alert 4 - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WEEK | 25 News Now - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WTVY - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WITN - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KY3 - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - 14 News - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WVIR - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives Were Never Truly Progressive An Interview with Dave Rubin - Hungarian Conservative - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - Atlanta News First - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WCTV - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KFYR-TV - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WVVA - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WVLT - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WSMV - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KNOE - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KXII - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives say Biss win is an anti-AIPAC template - Punchbowl News - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WABI - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - WYMT - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives vow 'no' votes on Iran war funding - KOTA Territory News - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives and green groups fear a gutting of core EU water regulations - Euractiv - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Orbn vouches to 'break down the gates of the progressives in Brussels' if he wins elections - Euronews.com - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Video. Orbn vouches to 'break down the gates of progressives in Brussels' - Euronews.com - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Prominent Illinois Democrat breaks with progressives on crime, illegal aliens - readlion.com - March 26th, 2026 [March 26th, 2026]
- Progressives say theyll vote against warrantless spy power renewal - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Big spenders have mixed night in Illinois as progressives mostly come up short - Roll Call - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Bernie Sanders, progressives to force new votes on blocking arms sales to Israel - Jewish Insider - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Both Trump and progressives are foggy on Iran - The Hill - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Advertisers shift to conservative creators over progressives under Trump - AOL.com - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Jeffries hasn't lost a single Democratic vote in 20 speaker ballots, but a new wave of progressives may be about to end that streak - Attack of the... - March 20th, 2026 [March 20th, 2026]
- Trump-enabling Democrats lost their elections to progressives in North Carolina last night - LGBTQ Nation - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Nida Allam Concedes to Valerie Foushee With Razor-Thin Loss for Progressives in Key Midterm Primary - The Intercept - March 7th, 2026 [March 7th, 2026]
- Progressives Are Getting Bad Advice on Iran - National Review - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Connecticut Must Reject Progressives Tax-the-Rich Agenda - Americans for Tax Reform - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Progressives threaten primaries over Iran vote - breakingthenews.net - March 4th, 2026 [March 4th, 2026]
- Texas Progressives Say Democratic Establishment Is Blowing It In the Rio Grande Valley - The Intercept - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Washington state progressives strike big business tax break from 'millionaires tax' - KUOW - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Labour must stop channelling Reform and unite with progressives. Thats the lesson from Gorton and Denton - The Guardian - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Progressives bet big on anti-Israel sentiment to oust Valerie Foushee in North Carolina - Washington Examiner - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Why Is the Democratic Party So Afraid of Progressives? - Zeteo | Substack - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Conservatives, Progressives, LGBTQ+ People, and Jars of Jam - New Ways Ministry - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Pandering to progressives on Iran will doom Starmer - The Telegraph - March 2nd, 2026 [March 2nd, 2026]
- Article | Most NYC Council progressives call on Hochul to tax the rich - POLITICO Pro - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Matt Walshs real history is a flawed challenge to progressives - UnHerd - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- Reform's Matt Goodwin said the Gorton and Denton by-election saw a coalition of Islamist and woke progressives. Labour came third in the election,... - February 27th, 2026 [February 27th, 2026]
- How Jesse Jackson set the stage for Bernie Sanders and todays progressives - The Conversation - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Pauline Hansons populism is a front. But there are lessons for progressives in One Nations surging popularity - The Guardian - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Ten Commandments Ruling Underscores That Progressives Need School Choice - Cato Institute - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Frank Floor Talk: The progress of progressives - CDC Gaming - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Democrats, progressives stage counterprogram to Trump State of the Union - Scripps News - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- The subspecies of progressives and how theyre mutually reinforcing - Why Evolution Is True - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Lessons from the Maharashtra Civic Polls: Why Progressives Need to Urgently Focus on the Booth - The Wire India - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Right-Wing Think Tanks Are Building a New Hegemony Europe's Progressives Must Fight Back - Social Europe - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- Can Vancouver Progressives Unite to Win the Next Election? - The Tyee - February 24th, 2026 [February 24th, 2026]
- For Thailand's popular progressives, winning the vote is only the first hurdle - BBC - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Trying to influence progressives in New Jersey, AIPAC may actually help one get elected - The Forward - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Here is a political lesson progressives need to learn, and fast: British pubs are crucial | Simon Jenkins - The Guardian - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down,' says liberal host - AOL.com - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abolish ICE is the new defund the police for progressives: Charlie Hurt - Fox News - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Roland Martin says White progressives criticizing Jasmine Crockett's Senate bid need to 'sit their a-- down' - Yahoo - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Ahead Of DHS Funding Battle, Progressives Demand Congress 'Melt ICE' - HuffPost - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Abbreviated Pundit Roundup: Progressives are ascendent as Trump sinks in the muck - Daily Kos - February 7th, 2026 [February 7th, 2026]
- Why a T-shirt in a hit movie is trending with Brazilian progressives: Almost every day they sell out - The Guardian - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- House Progressives Unveil 'Defund the Oligarchs, Fund the People' Resolution - Common Dreams - January 30th, 2026 [January 30th, 2026]
- Elmhurst Progressives Rally For Man Killed By Ice In Minnesota - Patch - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- Progressives Advance Radical Measure That Could Outlaw Hunting and Fishing in Oregon - thatoregonlife.com - January 26th, 2026 [January 26th, 2026]
- McKee finally endorsed a millionaires tax. Progressives and business groups arent happy. - rhodeislandcurrent.com - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Regressive attitude of the Progressives - The Guardian Nigeria News - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Trump Likes Some Populist Ideas. Progressives Are Split on Working With Him. - NOTUS News of the United States - January 24th, 2026 [January 24th, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Fox News - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Chris Rabb is trying to be the lefts standard-bearer as he runs for Congress. Will progressives rally around him? - inquirer.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Progressives could use the 'power of the purse' to block ICE funding - Yahoo - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- Trump threats and Bukele model on crime back Latin American progressives into corner - tdtnews.com - January 22nd, 2026 [January 22nd, 2026]
- National Progressives Side With Mamdani in House Race Splitting NYC Left - The Intercept - January 16th, 2026 [January 16th, 2026]