The Opinions - Michelle Goldberg: ‘More Democrats Need to Be Doing This’

Episode Date: May 20, 2025

In this episode, David Leonhardt, the editorial director of the editorial board, asks the Opinion columnist Michelle Goldberg what Democrats are doing right, what they’re doing wrong and what they s...hould consider doing next.Thoughts? Email us at theopinions@nytimes.com.This episode of “The Opinions” was produced by Jillian Weinberger. It was edited by Alison Bruzek and Kaari Pitkin. The rest of the show's production team includes Derek Arthur and Vishakha Darbha. Mixing by Isaac Jones. Original music by Pat McCusker and Carole Sabouraud. Fact-checking by Mary Marge Locker. Audience strategy by Shannon Busta and Kristina Samulewski. The director of Opinion Audio is Annie-Rose Strasser. Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:01 This is The Opinions, a show that brings you a mix of voices from New York Times opinion. You've heard the news. Here's what to make of it. I'm David Leonhard, the director of the New York Times editorial board. When I asked Democratic voters how they feel about their party's performance since President Trump took office in January, I tend to hear a lot of negative responses, words like confused, out of touch, and maybe above all, weak. Some of those critiques are accurate, but there is also a reason to believe that the Democrats may be doing a better job as Trump's opposition party than many people recognize.
Starting point is 00:00:48 After all, Trump's approval rating has significantly declined since he took office. That's a sign that some of the Democratic critiques are landing. And if you look at Congress right now, you'll see that Democrats are largely united, while Republicans are bickering about what to include in their big budget bill. Democrats, to be clear, do have a lot of problems. They don't control a single branch of government, and their party is even less popular than Trump is. Today on the opinions, we're going to talk about what the party is doing right, what it's doing wrong, and what it should consider doing next. We have a great guest to talk about these issues today.
Starting point is 00:01:22 My colleague Michelle Goldberg, a Times opinion columnist, who's reported extensively on the Democrats' response to Trump. Michelle, welcome to the show. Hi, David. Thanks for having me. Okay, let's get into it. It's a cliche, a famous cliche, to say that the Democrats can never get anything right. There's a joke about the media always writing Dems and Disarray. So let's defy the cliche and start by talking about what the party has done right in the four months since Trump took office again. What do you think is on that list?
Starting point is 00:01:51 Okay, before we do that, and I'm going to do that. But I do kind of want to take issue with the notion that Trump's falling approval rating is necessarily connected to the Democrats' performance. Oh, good. Because I think that Trump's following approval rating is, first of all, connected to his insane tariff strategy. and also just that the more people see of Trump, often the less they like him. When he's not in power, people project all these ideas onto him. And then when they see the kind of chaos and cruelty that he brings, you know, some people obviously love it. But you always sort of see some erosion.
Starting point is 00:02:32 That's fair. Can I just make one point in response to that, which is I'm not really sure how else we can measure the Democrats' performance other than Trump's approval rating. And I do think it's possible it's completely disconnected from the Democrats. But I also think if they can bring his approval rating down or if his approval rating does come down, it is going to be bad for Trump. I assume you agree with that part. Yeah. Okay. I just think that Trump has probably done more to bring his approval rating down at this point than the Democrats have.
Starting point is 00:02:58 I agree with that. With that said, what do you think the Democrats have done right? Well, I think certain Democrats have been doing the right thing. So I'll name a couple. And this isn't necessarily to say that I think that their political approach is the one that the party as a whole needs to adopt going forward. I should just say that. You know, obviously, AOC has been really strong in going out into the country, showing the scale of opposition to Trump, even in red states, you know, kind of putting together with Bernie Sanders, these massive rallies and connecting Trump's kind of corruption and autocratic tendencies to, you know, kind of. these policies that are going to make a lot of voters, including a lot of his own voters, worse off financially. I think you just made a really important distinction there, if I can jump in, which is what AOC and Bernie are doing is really valuable. They are demonstrating that there is
Starting point is 00:03:55 substantial opposition to Trump in a very visible way, right? These big rallies. And we know this has worked before, right? It worked to help defeat his attempt to repeal Obamacare when people got out there at a town hall meetings. That isn't necessarily saying that the AOC Bernie approach should be the future of the Democratic Party in every way. But I think a lot of moderates have gotten wrong the fact that what AOC and Bernie are doing is important and valuable. I just think people are so scared and desperate and, you know, want to see leadership that to them speaks to the scale of the emergency. We're taping this on Friday. I wrote this column about Democratic. and Biden's cognitive decline. And I got so many angry emails from readers saying, you know,
Starting point is 00:04:43 why are you focusing on looking backwards? Don't you understand the scale of the disaster that has befallen us? And, you know, those people, the scale of the loss and the grief that they feel, which I understand because I feel it too, that I assumed for all my cynicism about American politics that I was going to die in a liberal democracy that wasn't that far removed from the one I was born into. And so, you know, and those people just feel leaderless. And this isn't really a question of left versus right. It's more sort of passivity versus fighting. And I think anybody who can just show that they, A, understand what people who feel like they are living in a kind of hellish emergent dictatorship, anyone who can kind of speak to them, say that they're there with them, that they're going to do what
Starting point is 00:05:40 they can to stand up for them. You know, I think that Governor Pritzker in Illinois is doing this. I think that Senator Chris Murphy is doing this. And I think more Democrats need to be doing this. Okay, what else do you think the party is getting right? So a couple of other things. I think that Hakeem Jeffries has been very good at keeping his caucus together to make sure that they're not kind of giving Republicans votes to help pass some of these harmful bills that they're, that they're they're trying to shove through with their very narrow majority. I think that Chris Van Hollen took a risk that really paid off by going to El Salvador and pursuing the case of Kilmar Arbrego Garcia. And, you know, when Van Hollen went down to El Salvador, there was some
Starting point is 00:06:26 skepticism among, I think, some centrist Democrats and pundits that immigration is one of Trump's better issues, why are we highlighting the salience of it, and why should Democrats be aligning with this person who obviously shouldn't have been deported to El Salvador, but isn't the kind of person that you want to make the poster boy for asylum cases? You know, but I think that he took a risk. He drew attention to this atrocity. And if you look at the polling, you know, the polling has moved. Immigration has stopped being such a great issue for Donald Trump and in some polls he's actually underwater on it. And majorities of people believe that Kilmar Abrago-Gargo-Garcia should be returned. We're going to talk about this idea of kind of how much Democrats need to
Starting point is 00:07:18 moderate. And obviously you do need to be somewhat in line with public opinion. But I think Democrats also need to understand that public opinion isn't a static thing and that they have some agency in shaping it. Okay. What do you think the party's done wrong? I think that there was a lot of shell shock when Trump was first elected, especially because he won the popular vote as well as the electoral college vote. And that led to this period of intense self-flagellation and also passivity, right? And I think that that left a lot of people feeling really leaderless.
Starting point is 00:07:58 And then I've also, I wish I could say more about that. this, but I've had some off-the-record conversations with Democrats, and I divide my kind of off-the-record conversations with Democrats into two groups. There's people who really get the scale of the threat that we're facing, the scale of the kind of potential transformation of the kind of country and the kind of regime that we're governed by. And then there's people who think that Trump is just like a kind of worse Republican and to basically think that things are going to bump along some version of normally. And I think that the latter people might think I'm hysterical, I think they're suffering from a catastrophic lack of imagination. So I actually agree with you in large part
Starting point is 00:08:53 about the scale of the threat. I did not think that I would be living in a version of the United States where the threat to democracy was as big as it is today. And so for me, that actually is an argument about why the Democrats need to be particularly rigorous and introspective about why they are so unpopular among so many voters, because they are essentially of our two political parties, the only one that has shown a real commitment to small D democracy. And if voters are rejecting them for other reasons. It's a really big problem for our country. And so I want to ask you, I want to get into a couple specific. Well, can I ask you? What's your theory for why they're so unpopular? I think there's a mix of things. I think some of it is bad luck. I think you can argue that a bunch of
Starting point is 00:09:41 the inflation stuff is bad luck that afflicted ruling parties in much of the world, both right and left. And then I think there are two other factors that the Democrats inflicted on themselves. One is Joe Biden's age and the denial about that. And that is back. And then there's the fact that the party really got out of step on a whole bunch of big issues with public opinion in a really big way. Republicans are out of step on abortion, as you and I have talked about, clearly. But the list of issues in which the Democratic Party got out of step with the public opinion might be longer. And the extent to which the Democratic Party moved so far, I don't even know if left is the right word, but so far left, if you want to describe it that way, on immigration, way out of step with the American people was just a huge problem in this election. Do you think that's unfair?
Starting point is 00:10:26 No, I don't think it's unfair, but I think that you're missing something. I think that there's another reason why they're so unpopular. I don't discount any of the ones that you just listed. But if you look at the polls, Democrats are really unpopular with Democrats, right? That's part of the reason why their approval ratings are at historic lows. And they're unpopular with Democrats because they don't think they're fighting hard enough. You know, not because they want them to triangulate more, but because they want them to stand up more. I think to win elections, they're going to have to bring along not only Democrats who want them to fight harder, but also the sort of swing voters who think the party got out of step.
Starting point is 00:11:02 And what I think is interesting, I mean, you got at this earlier, and I think it's a really important distinction. You can fight hard and still not be on an ideological extreme. And when I look at the Democrats who won really tough races in places that Trump also won, I see two things. They don't come off as weak. In fact, they come off as quite strong and tough and often positive. But they also come across as moderate on a bunch of issues. And I want to play something for you and get your response to it. This is Ruben Gallego, the senator from Arizona, who won that state, even though Trump ended up winning it by more than five percentage points over Kamala Harris.
Starting point is 00:11:38 Here's Senator Gallego. When the Democrats basically dropped the ball on the chaos on the border for many years, we essentially lost the debate on immigration reform for years because the everyday voter doesn't trust us. on the border and on immigration forum because for years they saw that chaos on the border and we did nothing. The Biden administration finally moved, but by then it had been so long and the damage had been done. So I think he's obviously right on the politics. I guess the one thing that enrages me about this debate, especially when sort of people are like, well, you have to give Trump credit for closing the border, is what we had to sacrifice to do that, right? So when Biden finally, acted on the border, he basically shut down the asylum process. That was the cost of containing
Starting point is 00:12:30 the chaos at the border in the absence of legislation that would give you the resources to like vastly scale up the personnel that you would need to kind of hear all these claims and weed out the ones that were bogus because our legislative system is so dysfunctional. The way that Biden finally got on top of this was to give up something that I think is pretty sacred and is a pretty big loss. And you can argue that that was necessary. Maybe it is. But we don't talk enough about why it was so hard to control the border without the sort of resources that were required while still honoring this thing that I thought was beautiful and sacred about this country, which is that we were a refuge for many people. And now we're not. And so if that's something
Starting point is 00:13:27 that we have to give up to stave off fascism, I'm open to that argument. I think it might be true, but I also think it's a tragedy. I think it would be a tragedy, too. I'm hopeful we don't have to give it up. But we have. We gave it up. We have given it up for now. I think the slight reason for optimism is presidents tend to produce backlashes to their policies. I think, this presidency of Trump's will make Americans more favorable toward immigration than they were when he took office. I do think we have to solve a really hard problem, which is given modern transportation networks, huge numbers of people can make it to this country and claim asylum. And we have to figure out how to distinguish between those who would like to move here and
Starting point is 00:14:12 those who are legitimate candidates for asylum. Right. But that's, I mean, that's actually not that insoluble a problem if you just put the resources into hiring the people to screen them, right? That's been the thing that we can't do. Yep, yep, and that will take a lot more resources. And we mentioned Gallego. He actually has just come out with an immigration plan
Starting point is 00:14:33 which calls for many more border agents who have more authority to make asylum decisions. And there are details there that people will debate, but something like that, along with more pathways to legalization, which is what his plan also calls for, and a path to citizenship for dreamers and others, still, I think, should be the long-term goal. Right. So actually, I mean, so the interesting thing is that I don't know if there's any daylight, actually, between Gallego's position and that of a lot of progressives. I mean, the really different thing is his affect. You know, he, I was in Arizona a bunch in the run-up to the 2024 election. And, you know, Gallego is a Marine. He's Latino. He's a normal person. He's.
Starting point is 00:15:16 charismatic. And I think that that stuff goes a pretty long way. And I tend to think that a lot of the Democrats' problems can be solved through candidate recruitment and just recruiting people who come from the communities that they want to represent, who are fluent in the cultural norms of the places that they come from. I think that's very different than, say, A, and I think you probably agree with this, it's very different than, say, Governor Gavin Newsom, who is, you know, doing this really sort of pitiful and thirsty triangulation to try to appeal to some mythical group of voters who, you know, are sort of skeptical of Trump, but really want to hear from Charlie Kirk.
Starting point is 00:16:05 Yeah, I mean, I would be very surprised if Newsom ended up being the Democrats' next presidential nominee. Me too. Your point about that a lot of this is about messaging, brings me to another Democrat who won in a place where Trump won, which is Alyssa Slotkin, who is a House member, now she's a senator from Michigan. She won a very narrow race in Michigan. And she has criticized the party for being weak and woke.
Starting point is 00:16:29 What do you think of that critique? I think it's basically right. I would like to hear her be more specific about what is the elements of wokeness that she wants to jettison. I mean, I'm all for getting rid of kind of newfangled, alienating language. But I mean, if you look at the Democrats who have won in places that Trump also won, they're not necessarily, say, anti-trans, right? Like, John Fetterman definitely isn't. Andy Bashir definitely isn't. Marie, Glusen-Camp Perez isn't. They differ from the party on
Starting point is 00:17:09 various different issues. And I think that there's probably just some inherent value in demonstrating independence. But it's hard to say, like, what is the style of moderation that unites all of the Democrats who win in red districts? I mean, what do you see as being the thing that ties them together? I agree with that. I don't think there's any particular issue that's necessarily important for Democrats to moderate on, maybe with the exception of immigration.
Starting point is 00:17:38 I think there's a version of elite social liberalism that is very unpopular in this country and was ascendant, I don't know, roughly from 2016 to 2021, we can dispute the exact dates. I think it's important for Democrats in tough places to pick a fight or maybe two fights with that version of elite social liberalism that's unpopular. But I don't think it necessarily has to be on some technocratic policy grounds. And I don't think it has to be on any one issue. If you think about the ones you've mentioned, like Glusencamp Perez, the House member from Washington, She voted against student debt relief, and that sent a signal.
Starting point is 00:18:16 And so I do think it's important, basically, for these Democrats to pick a fight. I guess so. I mean, yes, maybe you might be right as an electoral matter. I do think there's a sort of pundit brain that thinks that, you know, sort of like one of the most important moments in modern American politics was Bill Clinton denouncing Sister Soldier during his first. presidential campaign. I defend her right to express herself through music. But her comments before and after Los Angeles were filled with a kind of hatred that you do not honor today and tonight. She told the Washington Post about a month ago, and I quote, if black people kill black people every day, why not have a week and kill white people? I know she is a young person, but she has a big influence on a lot of people. And when people say that, if you took the words, why? You're
Starting point is 00:19:12 and black and you reversed them, you might think David Duke was given that speech. You kind of constantly hear this refrain that Democrats need this sister-soldia moment to put distance between themselves and the party. And I think if you go back and look at the sister-soldia speech, it was in a speech to a civil rights group, and he had at that point already developed a lot of deep relationships and credibility. with a lot of black leaders. He wasn't necessarily trying to, he was trying to demonstrate his independence,
Starting point is 00:19:48 but he also wasn't kind of sneering at them or trying to stick a finger in their eye. And I do think that there is a kind of pundit brain that wants to see Democrats constantly punching left, that wants to see Democrats scorning a big chunk of the Democratic electorate. And again, I'm torn because I understand the need to show independence on a lot of these things. But I actually think it also, there's something weak about kind of constantly wanting to show that you're not like these voters. I mean, there's another axes that voters, I think, judge people on and that we also should try to evaluate them on, which is authenticity versus inauthenticity.
Starting point is 00:20:37 And there's certainly candidates for whom it's really authentic to them to be scornful of certain kind of like liberal social mores. You know, I'm thinking of Dan Osborne. I mean, he's not a Democrat. He was running as an independent, but he ran this like very, very interesting independent race came really close in Nebraska. He really is this kind of like union guy, you know, really does have this chip on his shoulder. older, and I say that in a good way, actually, about people that he regards as coastal elitists. And I think that's fine if that's really where you are. But I also think that, you know, there is something to be said for standing up for your
Starting point is 00:21:25 actual beliefs and your actual voters and, you know, the people who support you and kind of refusing to do that can also look really weak. I completely agree. I think the critique of punditocracy is really important, and I think authenticity is really vital. I think what a lot of moderate Democrats would say in response to that is that the left part of the party has made this mistake of assuming that it is correct on the issues on everything. And that the only reason— Well, everybody thinks they're correct. I mean, if you didn't think you were correct, they wouldn't be your views.
Starting point is 00:21:59 That's absolutely right. But I just want to say it is entirely possible for there to be Democrats who have Ruben Gallego's views about immigration, not because you think you need to do it to win elections, but because you genuinely think that the openness of Joe Biden's immigration policy was a problem. I think you and I might disagree a little bit on that, and that's okay. But I'm just saying that people who have more moderate, hawkish views on the border, they might genuinely have those views and thus be more in line with the American people, rather than that they secretly want the Biden immigration policy, but they're doing something else
Starting point is 00:22:36 in order to win elections. Right. But that's what I mean when I talk about the key being kind of candidate recruitment as opposed to candidate triangulation. Yes, yes. Okay, let's end by looking forward. Like you, I'm really worried about the state of American democracy. How are you feeling about what's important to happen before the 2026 midterms? What should people be doing now and in coming months to most try to protect, I think, what you
Starting point is 00:23:05 and I hold so dear about the American Democratic system? So I think it's really important, first of all, to this is going to sound kind of mushy, but I don't think it is, to like make people realize that they're not alone and they're not marginal in being horrified by this, especially if they live outside of, you know, kind of really blue enclaves. That's why I think it's so important to be doing these town halls and Republican districts that you see a couple Democrats doing, way more Democrats should be doing that. And, you know, Democratic senators should be doing those town halls in the red districts in their own state, you know, talking to the people that they represent whose own representatives are hiding from them. And the other corollary of that is it both, it demonstrates, I think,
Starting point is 00:23:57 a certain amount of aggressiveness, but it also just brings people together in real life, and there's no substitute for that. I mean, protesting can sometimes feel kind of futile when you have an administration that really doesn't care what half the country thinks. But I actually think that, you know, protests, especially when they reach a certain critical mass, can really capture the public imagination and change the conversation. And so you have these protests. They're getting bigger and bigger. They're getting more frequent.
Starting point is 00:24:34 At some point, I think they will reach a critical mass. And I think it's important to say that there's a lot of historical evidence that protest can work. It can shift the debate, as you've said. It can even influence judicial decisions. There's evidence to that. And so watching cable television probably is futile
Starting point is 00:24:51 and tweeting may well be futile, but actually attending town hall media. and attending protests really does matter. Yeah, and I think calling your congressman, like all that stuff makes a difference. Yes, it does. And I think that is exactly the right note to end this conversation.
Starting point is 00:25:07 Michelle, thank you so much for coming on. Thank you. If you like this show, follow it on Spotify, Apple, or wherever you get your podcasts. The Opinions is produced by Derek Arthur, Veshaka, Christina Samuelski, and Jillian Weinberger. It's edited by Kari Pitkin
Starting point is 00:25:49 and Alison Bruzick. Engineering, mixing, and original music by Isaac Jones, Sonia Herrero, Pat McCusker, Carol Sabro, and Afim Shapiro. Additional music by Amon Sahota. The fact check team is Kate Sinclair, Mary Marge Locker, and Michelle Harris. Audience Strategy by Shannon Busta and Christina Samuoski. The director of Times Opinion Audio is Annie Rose Strasser.

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