Comment: To win Senate back, Democrats need ‘combative centrists’

Progressives won’t like it, but a more moderate message is needed to fight and then defeat Trump.

By Matthew Yglesias / Bloomberg Opinion

Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer is under fire from progressives for not having a clear plan to fight President Donald Trump. He certainly deserves some criticism — but for an entirely different reason: He doesn’t have a clear plan to help Senate Democrats regain a majority.

For House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, the path to a majority is simple. Republicans hold a very narrow majority. If Democrats can get their frontline incumbents re-elected and recruit good candidates for the handful of Republican-held districts that former Vice President Kamala Harris won in last year’s presidential race, he will become speaker in 2027. Of course, this plan will take hard work, skill and a little luck. But it’s clear what the plan is.

In the Senate, things look different. In 2026, there is only one GOP-held seat in a Harris state up for grabs, that of Susan Collins of Maine; arguably the hardest-to-beat incumbent in Congress. Democrats’ next-best opportunity is in North Carolina, a state that Trump has won three times in a row.

Meanwhile, Democrats need to defend seats in Georgia and Michigan. Even if they won all four races, Democrats would still be two seats short of a majority. And 2028 isn’t much better. Democrats have a pickup opportunity in Wisconsin, and North Carolina is on the map again. But the party will need to defend seats in Pennsylvania, Georgia (again), Arizona and Nevada. This is the political equivalent of hoping to draw an inside straight twice in a row.

So: Under current conditions — an important caveat — the Senate map looks bad for Democrats for the next couple cycles.

It’s possible to argue that, considering these fundamentals, the party has actually done pretty well in winning elections. Schumer is a smart tactician who has recruited better candidates than Republicans, raised more money and ran better ads.

But tactics only get you so far. What Democrats need is a strategy for winning a Senate majority; a strategy that would put states like Alaska, Iowa, Ohio and Florida back on the map, while adding Texas. This is the only way to make Democrats systematically competitive in the Senate.

What the Democrats need, in other words, is not just more moderate candidates. They need a more moderate ideology.

Democrats are currently rallying around time-honored progressive ideas like a defense of Medicaid, Medicare and Social Security. These stances can indeed help them return to power in the Senate; but only if they are accompanied by more eclectic and heterodox positions on everything else. A party that’s against the domestic production of fossil fuels is not going to win in Texas, Alaska or Ohio. On a range of cultural issues such as the death penalty, late-term abortions, trans people’s participation on women’s sports teams and immigration enforcement, Democrats have let themselves get persistently on the wrong side of national public opinion; to say nothing of opinion in red states.

This isn’t brain surgery. Schumer knows how to count votes and read polls. He was deeply involved in Democrats’ successful big-tent recruiting strategy in 2006. But he has not thus far done anything to lay the groundwork for a repeat performance.

Of course, neither have any of his intra-party critics. But that should be the first responsibility of anyone making an argument for new leadership: What is the new leader supposed to do? What is the plan to win a majority? Tellingly, the progressives calling for Schumer’s head have no strategy of their own to offer, because the only strategy that would work is one they don’t like. Schumer, meanwhile, seems paralyzed by fear of further angering the left and unwilling to articulate the plain truth.

There is a way forward for both sides: Listen to the party’s base. As pollster Patrick Ruffini points out, while 80 percent of Democrats say they want the party to be more combative against Trump, when asked about ideology, “move to the center” beats “move to the left” by a 2-to-1 ratio. The synthesis of these two positions would be what Ruffini (who is a Republican, but don’t hold that against him) calls “combative centrism” — candidates who take moderate, mainstream positions on key issues while also vowing to block Trump nominees and otherwise hold the administration accountable.

What exactly this looks like would vary from state to state. But it would be a lot easier to pull off if Democratic candidates weren’t required to distance themselves from a toxic national brand. The leadership of the party itself needs to articulate more moderate positions. This would allow a candidate moderate enough to be competitive in Iowa or Ohio to also be a solid Democrat.

If you think that sounds unrealistic, let me remind you that Barack Obama won both of those states (and Florida!) twice in the not-too-distant past. The kind of Democratic Party that could win in those states would be meaningfully different from the current one, but not unrecognizable. And it would be exactly the same on the core questions of health care and retirement programs that Democrats of all factions recognize to be their best issues.

Yes, it would be hard for Schumer to sell the left on all this. But the pitch for combative centrism would also let him credibly tell his critics that he has a real plan not just to fight Trump but to beat him. Right now he’s stuck preaching patience and pragmatism while having no plausible path to victory. Getting out of the current rut would involve some risks. But staying stuck in it is certain to bring frustration and defeat.

Matthew Yglesias is a columnist for Bloomberg Opinion. A co-founder of and former columnist for Vox, he writes the Slow Boring blog and newsletter. He is author of “One Billion Americans.” ©2025 Bloomberg L.P., bloomberg.com/opinion. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Opinion

toon
Editorial cartoons for Sunday, June 15

A sketchy look at the news of the day.… Continue reading

AP government students at Henry M. Jackson High School visited the state Capitol this spring and watched as a resolution they helped draft was adopted in the Senate as part of the Building Bridges Future Leaders Academy. (Josh Estes / Building Bridges)
Comment: Future leaders learn engineering of building bridges

Here’s what Jackson High government students learned with the help of local officials and lawmakers.

Washington State Attorney General Nick Brown, speaks with reporters during a press conference in Seattle, on April 4, 2025. Brown has filed a lawsuit accusing the Adams County sheriff of sharing inmate information with federal immigration agents in defiance of a state law meant to limit collaboration between state law enforcement officers and federal immigration agencies. (Jordan Gale/The New York Times)
Comment: The reach and reason of sanctuary policies

They can’t protect people from ICE raids but local governments aren’t required to assist the agency.

Comment: Early cancer diagnosis can be key in saving lives

An act in Congress would allow Medicare coverage for early-detection tests for a range of cancers.

Comment: In wildfire crisis, options for forests, communities

By thinning threatened forests, mass timber can use that material for homes, businesses and more.

Forum: Everett’s land-use plan should keep affordable housing tool

Its comprehensive plan should keep inclusionary zoning, setting aside housing for working families.

The Buzz: ‘Your majesty, the peasants are revolting!’

Well, that’s a little harsh, but we’re sure the ‘No Kings’ protesters clean up well after their marches.

50 years after “Jaws,” look at sharks differently

This summer, the world celebrates the 50th anniversary of “Jaws,” the blockbuster… Continue reading

Church leader was calling for a religious riot

I was stunned by a recent letter praising pastor Ross Johnston and… Continue reading

Holocaust was rolled out slowly, too

The Holocaust didn’t happen overnight. Eliminating diversity, equity and inclusion and staging… Continue reading

In a gathering similar to many others across the nation on Presidents Day, hundreds lined Broadway with their signs and chants to protest the Trump administration Monday evening in Everett. (Aaron Kennedy / Daily Herald)
Editorial: Let’s remember the ‘peaceably’ part of First Amendment

Most of us understand the responsibilities of free speech; here’s how we remind President Trump.

Labor Secretary Lori Chavez-DeRemer testifies during a budget hearing before a House Appropriations subcommittee on Capitol Hill in Washington on Thursday, May 15, 2025. (Al Drago/The New York Times)
Editorial: Ending Job Corps a short-sighted move by White House

If it’s jobs the Trump administration hopes to bring back to the U.S., it will need workers to fill them.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.