From Salon:
Thursday, Nov 13, 2014 07:15 AM EST
Progressives’ overlooked winning formula: How Democrats can rebound in 2016
The post-election consensus is that the party is missing a broad economic message. It need only look to the left
Richard Kirsch, Next New Deal
This originally appeared on Next New Deal.
The big post-election consensus is that Democrats believe, as The New York Times put it, they were missing “a broad economic message to enthuse supporters and convert some independents.”
So what would that missing narrative be? The point of a narrative is to give people an explanation of what they are experiencing that includes what is wrong, who is responsible, and what we can do about it.
Take a look at two explanations of what’s happening that are very similar but different in important ways.
The first, from Republican message guru Frank Luntz, writing in The New York Times: “[F]rom the reddest rural towns to the bluest big cities, the sentiment is the same. People say Washington is broken and on the decline, that government no longer works for them — only for the rich and powerful.”
[Full quotation of copyrighted material reduced per our forum guidelines.]
Thursday, Nov 13, 2014 07:15 AM EST
Progressives’ overlooked winning formula: How Democrats can rebound in 2016
The post-election consensus is that the party is missing a broad economic message. It need only look to the left
Richard Kirsch, Next New Deal
This originally appeared on Next New Deal.
The big post-election consensus is that Democrats believe, as The New York Times put it, they were missing “a broad economic message to enthuse supporters and convert some independents.”
So what would that missing narrative be? The point of a narrative is to give people an explanation of what they are experiencing that includes what is wrong, who is responsible, and what we can do about it.
Take a look at two explanations of what’s happening that are very similar but different in important ways.
The first, from Republican message guru Frank Luntz, writing in The New York Times: “[F]rom the reddest rural towns to the bluest big cities, the sentiment is the same. People say Washington is broken and on the decline, that government no longer works for them — only for the rich and powerful.”
[Full quotation of copyrighted material reduced per our forum guidelines.]