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Milan Singh's avatar

My 2¢ is that back when I was 17-18 I wrote a series of articles for my high school newspaper arguing for reforms that would make it easier for more people to vote. At the time I thought this would probably help Democrats. As Matt points out that’s not true anymore. But I still think it should be easier to vote and I want more Americans to vote, and if that helps Republicans then so be it; it’s on us as Democrats to go back to the drawing board and work out a winning message.

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Andrew S's avatar

It’s a bit orthogonal to the piece, but given Matt’s intro I feel compelled to say: Just as it’s wrong to project from special elections to a high-turnout presidential race, it’s equally wrong to imply (as Matt seems to do) that 2026 will look like 2024 if the Dems don’t make ideological adjustments.

Dems will do well in 2026, even without making ideological adjustments, thanks to thermostatic public opinion and their more-likely-to-vote coalition. This is honestly why I’m not too worried about whether Dems do or don’t “moderate” in the immediate term.

IMO, the bigger argument / challenge is going to be between 2026 and 2028, when certain people will attribute 2026 success (assuming it happens) to the positions the Dems did or didn’t take rather than external factors. And when it does seem likely that moderating helps in a presidential election year.

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