Why Democrats lost in 2024 . . . Opinion Piece
I am stealing from Infidel753’s site to which the link is below in the title. There is truth to what is being said. In fact (and unless you are up on what is really happening) many of us may have happened as the nation was still in recovery from a recession of sorts. Then there was the issue of a late departure by Biden leaving Harris to run for the presidency. Couple that with 3 million people not voting and another ~2.5 million voting for others (Kennedy, etc.) and kazam we get Trump.
Infidel has his own blog to which I have included a link using the author’s name.
“Why the Democrats lost — economic reality,” Infidel753
During the 2024 campaign, Democratic candidates and activists often expressed frustration that voters believed economic conditions were bad, even though official statistics showed that things were booming. How could those foolish voters be so mistaken? (Well, actually, no one asked that except rhetorically. They just dismissed it as people being swayed by “Republican talking points”, which has become the go-to thought-canceling phrase used when squeezing one’s eyes shut against inconvenient facts.) Now comes this article by Eugene Ludwig, an economist and former US comptroller of the currency, explaining why in fact the voters were right, and the official statistics were — well, not always wrong, though some of them were, but calculated in a way that missed the realities of how most people actually live.
To begin with, there was the evidence of deteriorating conditions that was visible to anyone. Ludwig observes:
But when traveling the country, I’ve encountered something very different. Cities that appeared increasingly seedy. Regions that seemed derelict. Driving into the office each day in Washington, I noted a homeless encampment fixed outside the Federal Reserve itself.
Note that the same is true of the bogus “crime is down” narrative that Democrats endlessly regurgitated, while determinedly ignoring or rebuking ordinary voters’ insistence on believing what they could see happening in their downtowns right in front of their eyes instead of accepting the crime statistics being spouted by the talking heads (I’ve explained here multiple times why those statistics were wrong).
Ludwig assembled a team of researchers to investigate why the physical reality on the ground wasn’t reflecting the rosy official numbers. The post linked above reveals his findings. Unemployment, for example, is calculated in a way ludicrously divorced from reality. Anyone who is earning any money at all — even homeless people scrounging a little work here and there — is counted as “employed”. People who have given up and are no longer looking for work are not counted among the “unemployed”. The post itself gives more details and actual numbers. The final conclusion is a shocker:
I don’t believe those who went into this past election taking pride in the unemployment numbers understood that the near-record low unemployment figures — the figure was a mere 4.2 percent in November — counted homeless people doing occasional work as “employed.” But the implications are powerful. If you filter the statistic to include as unemployed people who can’t find anything but part-time work or who make a poverty wage (roughly $25,000), the percentage is actually 23.7 percent.
In other words, the true employment picture behind the rosy figures was disastrous.
The biggest economic issue in the election was inflation. Officially, inflation had largely abated, even though prices had not yet begun to return to normal levels. But again, the problem lies in the way the statistics are calculated. The Consumer Price Index tracks the price changes on eighty thousand different goods and services, but most of the costs encountered by most Americans involve only a small fraction of these — groceries, rent, insurance premiums, and the like. And prices on things people actually buy were going up much faster than the CPI’s average of those mostly-irrelevant eighty thousand items.
My own experience reflects this. By far my biggest expense is rent. Every year the increase in my rent, whether in percentage terms or absolute dollars, is considerably larger than the increase in my Social Security. My car insurance and health insurance (even with the ACA subsidy) go up by double-digit percentage increases each year. The official inflation rate bears no resemblance at all to the reality I actually experience. And the great majority of voters were in a similar position. Most people’s incomes were not keeping up. Not even close.
Finally, there is the issue of the distribution of economic growth, which Ludwig downplays, but which I think is critical:
There is, to be sure, real value in tracking the sheer volume of domestic production, though GDP is an imperfect measure even of that. But as useful as the figure may be in the sense that it purports to track generalized national wealth, it is hampered by a profound flaw: It reveals almost nothing about how the attendant prosperity is shared. That is, if a small slice of the population is awarded the great bulk of the bounty from economic growth while everyone else remains unenriched, GDP would rise nevertheless. And that, to a crucial degree, is exactly what has happened. Here, the aggregate measure of GDP has hidden the reality that a more modest societal split has grown into an economic chasm.
He follows with some discussion of education levels and geography, but in fact the real issue is at the top-income extreme. Over the last few years, the wealth of billionaires has increased by staggering amounts, with the very richest few heaping up individual piles in the hundreds of billions. They did not produce that wealth. The workers did. But the parasite class has perfected the art of gaming the system to skim off most of the growth in national wealth for themselves, leaving the actual creators of wealth struggling.
I was basically aware of most of this throughout the campaign. I still voted for Democrats pretty much across the board — the Republicans, obsessed with ever more tax cuts for the already wealthy, would have exacerbated these problems even more, not alleviated them. Yet it remained infuriating that most Democrats showed no real awareness of how dire the situation has become. And by reciting official numbers that bore no relation to the reality that most people were living in, they sounded hopelessly out of touch. I can understand why many who would otherwise have voted Democratic simply did not feel motivated to turn out. And many voters don’t vote based on which party they think will best solve the problems they see — instead, when things are bad, they vote against the party in power to punish them, regardless of who the alternative is. You can call people all the names you like for voting that way. It remains a fact, one which candidates need to accept and accommodate.
I write critical posts like this because I want Democrats to win in the future. To do so, they will need to accurately understand the reality the country is going through. As a general rule, any time you find yourself thinking “why are the voters so wrong?”, it’s you who are on the wrong track.
What the country needs is a radical populist agenda — a full restoration of reasonable tax rates on the ultra-wealthy plus whatever additional measures are needed to re-distribute those obscene piles of wealth back to those who actually created them. Ideas like basic income, national rent control, tough federal support for unionization, and other radical measures to address inequality need to be on the table. This is what the Democrats must embrace in order to win. Penny-ante fiddling around with tax credits for this and that is not going to cut it any more. The extreme concentration of wealth in the hands of a few is a national emergency. It needs to be treated like one.
[Please, no comments along the lines of “we’re becoming a dictatorship and there won’t be any more elections”. I’m trying to stay reality-based here.]

Blaming the voters mostly serves to relieve the losing side from being…well…losers. If loser really believe that they’re not to blame, then there is no reason to reform or to change anything about how they go about their business. They just wait for the only other alternative to screw up, which seems to have been the stance for at least the last decade.
Blaming the voters also helps make the case argued by some conservatives that, given the fact that voters are incompetent, there should be fewer of them. 200 years ago it was landholders that had the franchise. Now people who want fewer voters would perhaps limit that franchise to homeowners, shareholders and bondholders.
IOW doe we really want to blame voters for reading the economy correctly and consequently not holding the incumbent party accountable?
@John,
So you’re saying the Trump administration got into office without voters? Because if Trump was indeed elected in 2024, it is both logical and fair to blame the voters and those who failed to vote. Blaming the voters isn’t an argument for limiting the franchise. That’s just silly. It’s an argument for better educating the electorate about the consequences of their choices. Trump is doing that, and judging from his poll numbers, the electorate is better educated in 2026 than it was in 2024.
Thank you for the reprint and link.
In a representative democracy, politicians and parties should maintain an attitude of humble and respectful obedience to the will of the voters. Instead, the Democrats in 2024 lectured, scolded, and disrespected the voters, and the voters quite appropriately smacked them down and reminded them of their proper place as a party. It is not the voters who “failed”, if that can even mean anything in a democracy — it was the party that failed by not listening to the voters and not aligning itself with their wishes and concerns as defined by the voters themselves, not by a bunch of arrogant out-of-touch activists.
Note that the Republicans are now repeating the same mistakes (along with all their other blunders and abuses) and will likely reap the same result.
The representatives are supposed to represent us. If they do not, we will keep smacking them across the face until they stop lecturing, start listening, learn their place, and start doing what we damn well tell them to do.
@Infidel,
So voting for Trump or third party candidates or staying home is meant to “punish” the Democratic Party? It looks to me like everyone, including Republican voters, is being punished since Trump came to power.
I felt lectured to, scolded and disrespected by GOP candidates. How come the GOP gets a pass? Or is this just the soft bigotry of low expectations?
It seems to me that not holding voters responsible for their decisions is infantilizing the electorate. Voting for a bad choice because your fee-fees were hurt is certainly juvenile. I haven’t seen the polls showing that a majority of those who switched from Biden in 2020 to Trump in 2024 did so because of hurt feelings.
The wishes and concerns of voters in 2024 included healthcare access; I fail to see how Democratic Party support for the ACA demonstrates that it was not listening to the voters and not aligning itself with their wishes and concerns as defined by the voters themselves.
So voting for Trump or third party candidates or staying home is meant to “punish” the Democratic Party?
That’s a decision every individual voter needs to make. My point is that the fault lies not with the voters, but with the politicians who lecture the voters rather than listening and obeying. You seem to be saying that the attitude of the parties must be taken as a given and the voters should be judged for how they react to it. In a representative democracy, it’s the will of the voters that should be taken as a given, and the politicians should be judged by how well they obey it.
How come the GOP gets a pass?
They don’t. As I said, “the Republicans are now repeating the same mistakes (along with all their other blunders and abuses) and will likely reap the same result.”
not holding voters responsible for their decisions is infantilizing the electorate
No, not holding politicians and parties responsible when they fail the voters is refusing to understand how representative democracy is supposed to work.
Voting for a bad choice because your fee-fees were hurt is certainly juvenile.
No, politicians failing to do what the voters want because they place a higher value on some boutique ideology is betraying representative democracy.
I haven’t seen the polls showing that a majority of those who switched from Biden in 2020 to Trump in 2024 did so because of hurt feelings
No, they switched because the Democrats were screwing up and lying about it and prioritizing ideological nonsense over dealing with the voters’ actual problems. It wasn’t necessarily irrational to think that even Trump might do better.
I fail to see how Democratic Party support for the ACA demonstrates that it was not listening to the voters
It doesn’t, but that wasn’t the only issue. Inflation and unemployment were out of control and the Democrats were lying about it and insulting the voters for not believing the lies. The Democrats used ridiculous Newspeaky language like “undocumented immigrant” and “Latinx” and “LGBTQ” that made them sound like Martians, and called people names for objecting to it. They supported boys in girls’ sports and mentally-ill men in dresses using the girls’ bathroom and called people names if they objected to that. They celebrated the cultural changes resulting from mass immigration, which make most people seriously uneasy, and called people names if….. you get the idea. I had to hold my nose pretty hard to vote for them. I’m not sure I can do it again.
NYC voter turnout in mayoral election largest in more than 50 years, officials say
https://www.nbcnewyork.com/news/politics/nyc-voter-turnout-breaking-records/6414233/
If you want voters to vote for you, you have to have an appealing candidate with an appealing message. If you just keep telling voters not to believe their lying eyes about kitchen table issues, a lot of potential voters are likely to turn you off and not vote.
Fact is that real household income stagnated under Obama until 2016. It jumped by 10% under Trump, until COVID. It stagnated again under Biden.
https://fred.stlouisfed.org/series/MEHOINUSA672N/
You can argue about who to assign blame and credit for what happened, but it’s hard to argue that voters’ perceptions were wrong. And if Democrats could not credibly offer something better, why would people make the effort to come out and vote for them?
I’m trying to stay reality-based here ~ I’m trying to stay out of it
Because there’s a lot here to both agree and disagree. I joke about how Anarchists don’t have a platform because they can’t agree on anything. Not a joke and not exclusive ~ The Left, generically, can’t even agree on what to agree on. I’m not calling for lockstep, just for people to wake up to the common enemy. We can get back to bickering later
I’ve had a bad attitude about third-parties since my logging days, and it’s got nothing to do with logging. I had a Pinto. It never blew up. Also had a one-ton Chevy four by four with saddle-tanks and documented propensity to explode when t-boned, when struck from the side. Like the Pinto it didn’t blow up, and it was pretty obvious it was all a put up, a shill. A scam. Nader got paid pb General Motors to smear Ford and pretty much says all there is to say about third-parties
1990 was the year I came down out of the woods …
Of course nothing has changed for the better with Republican rule and the orange one dictating for five of the last nine years. Do people who vote know that?
Much like the market can remain irrational longer than you can stay solvent, so can the voters make self destructive choices until the republic ceases to exist.
Since the average American reads at a middle school level and more than half are sub sixth grade, should we expect understanding of complex systems? No, so we need candidates who are capable of winning a 7th grade class election, unfortunate as that is. Hence Orange Jesus.
The white lady with the private email server and the lecturing black lady were no match for the WWF warrior in the middle school vote.
The Dems need national candidates who can bend the media – that’s it. All that calm during the Biden presidency left a gaping hole in the media landscape that was filled with this and that problem, conflict and controversy. Distract to keep your negatives off the headlines and point and laugh (or cringe) at the negatives of the opponent. But do it loudly. The adults will still vote for the Dem because they know it is better than the alternative.
I totally agree with Infidel. The voters DID vote for this. It’s up to the Dems to realize who the electorate is.
Soft Landing or . . .
There was nothing wrong with Kamela Harris other than she was a person of color and a woman. Kamala did step out of her place as a Black woman and put Trump in his place. White America and males did not like this.
So now they and we pay.
Harris didn’t lose because of race or sex. That’s just the outdated left-activist-fringe fixation on identity categories manifesting itself. Most of the country has moved on. Obama was elected president twice and Hillary Clinton won the popular vote. Yes, there are a few people who would never vote for a black person or a woman, but those people would never vote for a Democrat anyway. Harris lost because of the issues I detailed above, and any Democrat who did the same, regardless of race or sex, would have fared equally badly.
Lessons from the past decade, it’s always somebody else’s fault…voters, Putin, racism, sexism…
If it’s never your fault, you never have to do a Lessons Learned exercise or make any changes, just wait for the Rs to screw up, which is exactly the current Carville sourced strategy.
Time to stop whining and start listening to voters?
@John,
Democrats have been winning and winning in off-cycle elections, including in red districts.
I have to reluctantly agree with those who assign major responsibility to Biden. First, for not getting out earlier to allow for a meaningful campaign on the Democratic side. Secondly, for his blank check support of Netanyahu’s campaign to push the Palestinians out of Gaza and the West Bank, turning off millions of potential Democratic voters. Thirdly, for an aimless and ineffective argument for how his economic moves were designed to help the economy and the people who were suffering from inflation largely caused by Covid. Then, too, there was the stubborn refusal to address illegal immigration. The contrast with Obama on that was stark. For all of that, the responsibility of the voters is overwhelming. Trump told them what he intended to do and they chose it.
Republican Speakers of the House have managed bills under and majority of the majority principle, while Democrats have not. This undermines the will of the people.
I am bothered by how many of the positions attributed to Democrats above are what Republicans say that Democrats believe rather than what Democrats actually believe. Republicans are better at that game.
I do have to agree that Biden (and those who did not dissuade him from running again) made a huge mistake. But that mistake was in failing to understand how effective misinformation can be when so many people are willing to vote without adequate information.
@Arne,
Agreed. Democrats are better at governing. Republicans are better at propaganda.
There are so many explanations of what went wrong and how serious it is for the future of the Democratic Party, but we need to maintain perspective and remind the public how close this race really was. To win the 270, Harris only lost by 231,646 votes — WI by 29,417 votes; MI by 80,618; and PA by 121,611. There is very little reporting on this fact, and a lot of misleading reporting about “Trump’s big win” and how damaged and out of touch the Democratic Party is. Harris simply needed a little more work in WI, MI, & PA & less in other battlegrounds & she would have won.
While she narrowly lost the popular vote, and that is a concern, she only had a very short time to spread her message to the masses & was in a difficult spot in trying to establish her own identity in the shadow of Biden. Additionally, even in the most important election maybe ever, some 90 million potential voters didn’t vote and 10% of them said they didn’t think their vote would count.
@JP,
Excellent comment. I would just add that folks who wasted their votes on 3rd party candidates also contributed to Trump’s win.
Right. In the 2024 U.S. Presidential Election, third-party and independent candidates received approximately 2.88 million votes. This accounted for about 1.85% of the total popular vote. That’s a BIG DEAL!
I’m not sure “a little extra work” would have done it. As I said earlier, I think voters need to take responsibility for what they did and didn’t do.
100 days campaign v. 5+ years campaign. Pretty good advantage.
Which a Little extra work would have had a difficult time overcoming.