Democratic Socialists are in the process of taking control of the Democratic Party. First, there were Senator Bernie Sanders and “the squad” in the US House of Representatives. Then Zohran Mamdani was elected to be the mayor of New York City. Last week, Colorado Democrats chose a Democratic Socialist to be the Democrat nominee for Congress. There is a definite movement towards Communism, which Michael Freund discusses in his article published in The Daily Signal.
Every
political movement eventually reveals what it truly believes. And when it does,
voters have a choice to make.
For
years, Americans were told that the radical Left was little more than a noisy
fringe, loud on social media but marginal in real life. That claim is now hard
to sustain. Candidates aligned with or inspired by the Democratic Socialists of
America are winning elections, shaping debates, and pulling the Democratic Party
further from the mainstream. As Speaker of the House Rep. Mike Johnson, R-La.,
recently warned, “There are many Mamdanis popping up,” in reference to New York
City’s far-left mayor.
For
Republicans, this is not only a warning sign. It is also an opportunity.
The
rise of the DSA and the broader radical Left has created a widening gap between
the Democratic Party’s activist base and many of its traditional voters.
Millions of Americans who long considered themselves Democrats are discovering
that the party is no longer the same as the one they joined.
Political
realignments begin when voters feel that their old political homes no longer
reflect their values, concerns, or common sense. That is how Reagan Democrats
emerged in the 1980s. It is how many blue-collar voters drifted away from a
Democratic Party that seemed more interested in elite cultural causes than
working families. As Ronald Reagan himself once quipped, “I didn’t leave the
Democratic Party, the Democratic Party left me.”
A
similar opening may now be developing.
Many
Jewish voters, for example, have supported Democrats for generations out of habit,
conviction, and a belief that the party stood firmly against bigotry. But
especially since the Hamas massacre in Israel on Oct. 7, 2023, many of them
have watched with unease and horror as anti-Israel activism and outright
antisemitism became more prominent in progressive politics. They have seen
Jewish students harassed on campuses, anti-Zionist rhetoric treated as
fashionable, and too many elected officials speak with moral ambiguity about
Hamas when clarity was required.
For
many American Jews, this has been a painful awakening.
Republicans
should not assume that Jewish voters will abandon a century of voting patterns
overnight. But they should recognize that a door has opened. The GOP can make
the case that it is the party most committed to defending Israel, combating
antisemitism, protecting religious liberty, and preserving the freedoms that
have allowed Jewish life in America to flourish.
But
Jewish voters are only one part of a much larger political story. Across the
country, millions of moderate Democrats increasingly feel politically homeless.
They
have never thought of themselves as conservatives, but they do believe in
public safety. They want police to be supported, not vilified. They believe
parents should have a meaningful voice in their children’s education. They want
a strong economy, affordable energy, secure borders, and a government that
lives within reasonable limits.
They
do not wake up thinking about revolutionary politics. They just want normalcy,
stability, opportunity, and a country they can proudly pass on to their
children.
These
voters are not unreachable. But they must be reached.
That
requires persuasion.
Republicans
need to speak to disaffected Democrats in a language that invites rather than
alienates. Joining the GOP does not require having voted Republican one’s
entire life. It does not require abandoning compassion, concern for the poor,
or civic responsibility. It only requires recognizing that the supposedly good
intentions of Democrats are no substitute for sound policy, and that a free
society cannot survive if every institution is captured by ideology.
The
GOP should become the natural home for Americans who believe in ordered
liberty, economic opportunity, strong families, religious freedom, public
safety, and patriotism without apology.
Reaching
these people means showing up in communities Republicans have too often written
off. It means speaking directly to Jewish voters and independents in New York,
Florida, Pennsylvania, Michigan, and even California. It means addressing
suburban parents ignored by school bureaucracies. It means talking to
working-class Democrats who believe their party now cares more about academic
slogans than grocery bills, crime, housing, and wages.
Most
of all, it means offering a positive vision.
Voters
rarely switch parties due to anger alone. They switch when they believe there
is somewhere better to go.
Republicans
should resist making this moment only about what the Left has become. They must
also explain what the Right has to offer: a country where hard work is
rewarded, children are taught to love America, religious communities are
respected, streets are safe, allies are defended, and government serves the
people.
When
one party moves too far from the center of gravity of the American people, the
other has a chance to build a new majority.
But
that opportunity will not seize itself.
The
rise of the DSA is bad for the Democratic Party and dangerous for the country.
But it may also become the catalyst for a broader Republican coalition – one that
brings together conservatives, Jews alarmed by antisemitism, moderates tired of
extremism, parents fighting for their children, and traditional Democrats who
still believe in the promise of America.
The
radical left is pushing them away. Republicans should now act to welcome them
in.
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