
A Progressive Critique of Political Messaging, Economic Misunderstanding, and Voter Psychology
A rerun of sorts, I know. I have posted on this subject often but that’s because this is a subject that is on my mind a lot. Now, 100+ days into trump’s second term I find myself wondering yet again why have democrats and the Democratic Party not changed their narrative, their message, their style?
The Liberal Paradox: Righteous but Losing
To quote Jeff Daniels’ character from The Newsroom:
“If being a liberal is so great, why do they lose elections so goddamn always?”
It’s a fair question. Liberals believe we’re on the right side of history—yet we keep losing, especially at the local and state levels. While we occasionally gain a few seats, we rarely hold lasting majorities.
National wins often come only after Republicans crater the economy. Don’t take my word for it—Google the last 100 years of recessions and who held power before them. The pattern is hard to ignore.
Economic Policy and the Illusion of Prosperity
Republican tax cuts sound great—until you realize they disproportionately benefit corporations and the ultra-wealthy. While economists generally agree taxes are necessary, current policy ensures working Americans shoulder the burden.
Want evidence? Read Robert Reich, listen to economists, or ask someone who can’t afford both groceries and rent this month.
The Trump Effect: How Did He Win Twice?
Trump’s 2016 win was shocking. His 2024 return is even more so.
Despite indictments, conspiracies, and a historical record of misconduct, millions voted for him again. Why?
Because disbelief isn’t strategy—and polling is broken. That failure to predict, to feel the national mood, says something profound about modern society.
When One Party Owns the Supreme Court
This time around, Republicans don’t just control the White House and Congress—they effectively hold the Supreme Court too. Our system of checks and balances has tipped into imbalance.
Want proof? Visit supremecourt.gov and review the Court’s recent rulings. Let the data speak.
Post-2016: Lessons Learned, Then Ignored
After 2016, Democrats analyzed their failures—but made few changes.
I believe the root issue is education:
Most Americans lack basic economic literacy Reading comprehension is declining Many don’t understand how the government works
And worse than ignorance is learning and then doing nothing with it. Which is what Democrats did after 2016.
A Story from California’s Central Valley
I live in California’s Central Valley—not the coast, but the farm belt. Well I used to. It’s conservative, economically depressed, and dependent on tax dollars from elsewhere. A classic red-area welfare state.
I once had a telling conversation with my wife’s aunt, who moved from California back to Tennessee. I mentioned how low taxes were here. Her reply:
“$3,000 in property taxes is low?”
Yes—because it’s capped at 1.25% and tied to higher property values. But none of that mattered. She focused on one number that didn’t feel right to her. That’s how people form opinions—and votes.
Facts Don’t Win Hearts—Feelings Do
This is where Democrats fail.
Democrats respond to emotion with data.
Democrats counter feelings with charts.
Democrats mistake rationalism for connection.
Kamala Harris lost voters the moment she answered, “Nothing,” to a question about what she’d do differently in a second term. It doesn’t matter what she said after that. People stopped listening.
The GOP Connects with Voters, They Lie but They Make Connections
Republicans tell people what they want to hear—about gas prices, grocery bills, and “freedom.” Even if it’s false, it feels true because it is what their base already believes, “It’s not my fault.”
Democrats often tell the truth—badly.
They offer facts that contradict lived experience.
And no one wants to vote for someone who makes them feel stupid.
How Psychotherapy Teaches Us to Win
As a psychotherapist, I know this:
If a patient doesn’t feel heard, they walk out.
If you try to interpret their experience before validating it, you lose them.
It’s the same with voters.
We must meet people where they are, not where we think they should be.
Conclusion: Save the Facts for the Reports
If we want to win elections, we can’t lead with data.
We must lead with empathy.
Address the issue as people experience it. Speak their language. Then guide them with truth.
Because when people feel seen, they listen.

