Democrats begin soul-searching – and finger-pointing – after devastating loss

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It’s the inflation, stupid.

As divided and demoralized Democrats sift through the ashes of the 2024 election map, most agree on two points: Vice President Kamala Harris was fighting strong headwinds when it came to how voters felt about the cost of living. And her inability to convince enough voters that she could do a better job than President-elect Donald Trump on the economy cost her the election.

Two-thirds of voters rated the economy poorly, according to exit polls. Mr. Trump won them by 70% to 28%. Nearly half of all voters said their family’s financial situation was worse today than four years ago – and they backed Mr. Trump by 81% to 17%.

Why We Wrote This

Working-class voters abandoned Kamala Harris in droves. Democrats are fighting about went wrong – and where to go from here.

And less-well-off voters were more likely to swing to Mr. Trump. In 2020, he lost voters who made less than $50,000 by 10 points. This year, according to exit polls, he lost them by just one point. He lost voters who make between $50,000 and $100,000 by 15 points in 2020 – and won them this election. The only group that moved toward Ms. Harris was voters who make six-figure incomes. She won them by five points this year, after President Joe Biden lost them by 12 points in 2020.

Democrats are uniformly alarmed that working-class voters who once made up the core of the Democratic base continued to abandon the party in droves. But they don’t agree on why that happened, with some pointing to a failure to focus enough on pocketbook issues and soaking the rich, while others slammed tin-eared and sometimes condescending messaging from a professional class dominated by white college graduates.

“Working-class voters vote more on their perceived economic self-interest than abstract debates over things like democracy,” says Jeff Hauser, a Democratic strategist and former spokesperson for the AFL-CIO, the nation’s largest union federation. “Unfortunately, Democrats ran a campaign that in their national message was predominantly about abstract concerns like democracy, and less about the economy.”

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