« Far from draining the swamp, Trump and his administration will soon be bathing in it. We need to reveal the populist Trump as a plutocrat. The hypocrisy will be there in the upcoming tax legislation and slashed regulations for the powerful — all paid for by the middle class. With everyone from Big Oil to Big Pharma lining up for their share of the spoils, we will need to be strategic in how we strip away Trump’s populist veneer. By returning to our roots as the voice of the middle class, we can unite both moderates and progressives in a fight against the well-heeled and well-connected. »
— Rahm Emanuel at the Washington Post (archived).
Some people may screech "OMG, Rahm Emanuel!". But he and his frenemy Howard Dean were the co-architects of the 2006 blue wave landslide which saw Dems flip both the US House and Senate.
2004 had been a worse year for Dems than 2024. George "Dubya" Bush had gotten re-elected and is still the only GOP presidential candidate to get a majority of the popular vote since 1988. Dems lost four seats in the Senate including that of their leader Tom Daschle; Dems lost 3 House seats and were down to 202.
In 2005, Dubya thought he had a "mandate" from his re-election. In a fit of overreach, he went gallivanting around the US to push his plan to privatize Social Security. But his proposal was so unpopular that even local Republican members of Congress found excuses to miss Bush when he came to their states.
By November of 2006, Dems were in the ascendancy. And Rahm, who was in charge of the House campaign committee, deserves credit for that along with DNC Chair Howard Dean with his "50 state strategy". The two politicians were occasionally at odds but they paved the path to a victory which set the stage for the election of Barack Obama in 2008.
If different wings of the Democratic Party could work synchronously in 2005-2006, the same can be done now. The bickering inside the party needs to cease.
My own takes are that we need to personally engage with the communities we live in rather than rely on social media. And we need to listen to those people more than preach to them to understand what voters themselves consider important. Personal interaction is a strong way to get around MAGA media dominance and to fine tune our message.
So in the words of George W. Bush (which he never followed himself), be "a uniter, not a divider" to achieve victory.














