US Do Democrats Have a Messaging Problem?

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Do Democrats Have a Messaging Problem?​

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Some critics say the Democratic Party is struggling to respond to issues seized upon by conservative news media.

Jeremy W. Peters
By Jeremy W. Peters
Nov. 9, 2021

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When Republicans lost big in the 2012 election, the party commissioned a post-mortem analysis that arrived at a blunt conclusion about the way it communicated: “The Republican Party needs to stop talking to itself,” said the report, informally known as “the autopsy.”

After the elections last week, in which Democrats across the country lost races they expected to win or narrowly escaped defeat, some are asking whether the Democratic Party is suffering from a similar problem of insularity in its messaging.

Critics and some prominent liberals like Ruy Teixeira, a left-of-center political scientist, have argued that Democrats are trying to explain major issues — such as inflation, crime and school curriculum — with answers that satisfy the party’s progressive base but are unpersuasive and off-putting to most other voters.

The clearest example is in Virginia, where the Democratic candidate for governor, Terry McAuliffe, lost his election after spending weeks trying to minimize and discredit his opponent’s criticisms of public school education, particularly the way that racism is talked about. Mr. McAuliffe accused the Republican, Glenn Youngkin, of campaigning on a “made-up” issue and of blowing a “racist dog whistle.”

But about a quarter of Virginia voters said that the debate over teaching critical race theory, a graduate-level academic framework that has become a stand-in for a debate over what to teach about race and racism in schools, was the most important factor in their decision, and 72 percent of those voters cast ballots for Mr. Youngkin, according to a survey of more than 2,500 voters conducted for The Associated Press by NORC at the University of Chicago, a nonpartisan research organization.

The nuances of critical race theory, which focuses onthe ways that institutions perpetuate racism, and the hyperbolic tone of the coverage of the issue in conservative news media point to why Democrats have struggled to come up with an effective response.

Mr. Teixeira calls the Democrats’ problem with critical race theory and other galvanizing issues the “Fox News Fallacy.”

These issues are ripe for distortions and exaggeration by Republican politicians and their allies in the news media. But Mr. Teixeira says Democrats should not dismiss voters’ concerns as simply right-wing misinformation.

“An issue is not necessarily completely invalid just because Fox News mentions it,” he said.

In an interview, Mr. Teixeira said his logic applied to questions far beyond critical race theory. “I can’t tell you how many times I analyze a particular issue, saying this is a real concern,” he said. “And the first thing I hear is, ‘Hey, this is a right-wing talking point. You’re playing into the hands of the enemy.’”

Fox News is not the only institution capable of producing this kind of reaction from some on the left — it was just the one Mr. Teixeira chose to make his point as vividly as possible.

What to Know About the 2021 Virginia Election​

The conservative news media is full of stories that can make it sound as if the country is living through a nightmare. Rising prices and supply chain difficulties are cast as economic threats on par with the “stagflation” crisis of the 1970s, a comparison that is oversimplified because neither inflation nor unemployment is as high now. Stories of violent crime in large cities are given prominent placement and frequent airing; the same is true of coverage about the record number of migrants being apprehended at the southern border.

The Biden administration has struggled to address concerns about all of these issues. Critics pounced when the White House chief of staff, Ron Klain, posted a tweetthat cast inflation and supply chain disruptions as “high class problems,” seeming to dismiss the anxiety that Americans say they have about their own finances.

And despite border crossings hitting the highest number on record since at least 1960, when the government began tracking them, the Biden administration has resisted referring to the issue as a “crisis.” President Biden has faced persistent questions about why he has not visited the border.

Takeaways From the 2021 Elections​


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A G.O.P. pathway in Virginia. The win by Glenn Youngkin, who campaigned heavily in the governor’s race on education and who evaded the shadow of Donald Trump, could serve as a blueprint for Republicans in the midterms.

A rightward shift emerges. Mr. Youngkin outperformed Mr. Trump’s 2020 results across Virginia, while a surprisingly strong showing in the New Jersey governor’s race by the G.O.P. candidate unsettled Democrats.

Democratic panic is rising. Less than a year after taking power in Washington, the party faces a grim immediate future as it struggles to energize voters and continues to lose messaging wars to Republicans.

A new direction in N.Y.C. Eric Adams will be the second Black mayor in the city’s history. The win for the former police captain sets in motion a more center-left Democratic leadership.

Mixed results for Democrats in cities. Voters in Minneapolis rejected an amendment to replace the Police Department while progressives scored a victory in Boston’s mayoral race.

Then there’s crime. After a year and a half of calls from the progressive left for drastic policing reform, voters across the country last week rejected candidates and policies aligned with the “defund the police” movement. In two of the most striking examples, Minneapolis voters said no to a referendum to dismantle their city’s troubled police department. And New Yorkers elected as mayor a former police captain, Eric Adams, who strongly opposes “defund” efforts.

One liberal who apparently recognized the broader problems that Democrats have had explaining their platforms to voters was Maya Wiley, who ran against Mr. Adams in the mayoral primary as a proponent of sweeping police reforms. In an opinion essay for The New Republic this week, Ms. Wiley, a civil rights lawyer, wrote that while Republicans distorted the debate over critical race theory in Virginia, they also offered a more compelling message on education.

“If you only heard evening news sound bites, you would think all he talked about on the campaign trail was critical race theory,” Ms. Wiley said of Mr. Youngkin. “Not so. In fact, he sounded like a moderate Democrat, with the notable exception of C.R.T.”

Despite the dog whistling, Wiley said, the message was effective because it was empathetic. “He was saying he understood their pain,” she said.
 
You know, when people talk about CRT I just call it racist propaganda. It avoids the whole not true CRT thing. Maybe that isn't actually effective (the other way seems to have gotten results) but it does avoid the painfully boring 'well actually CRT is a legal philosophy and framework blah blah blah' argument.
 
These issues are ripe for distortions and exaggeration by Republican politicians and their allies in the news media.
This. This right here is why you're losing ground. Because you're all smug ideologues who can never, ever admit that you're wrong. You're constantly on the attack and you don't care who you hurt or how morally reprehensible you are as long as you get to hurt someone who disagrees with you.
 
Sure. And the progressive news media can give us wall-to-wall coverage about St. George of the Fentanyl, then maintain near-complete radio silence on the dearth of jogger-on-jogger killings, or try to explain away burning cities as both 'mostly peaceful' and 'racial reckonings.'

Just the fact that the media will never own any wrongdoing on their part is why they are unable to change course and win back the people who don't trust them. Personally, I hope they never get it. I want them to keep screaming that everyone is racist until whites just shrug and say 'So what?'
This same news media will refuse to report on a 7 year old black girl who gets shot and killed in the crossfire of some gang bangers in Chicago, AND THEN have the fucking temerity to accuse their AUDIENCE of racism because of Gabby Petito and "missing white woman syndrome."
 
Voters saw cities torched last year because of that. The unmistakable core message of the rioters was that policing, law enforcement officials, the courts, the jails, and the law itself was racist because of... CRT. The legal system as an institution is racist because blah blah whatever leftie word-salad white supremacy.
Their explanations turn into word salad because even they know how their arguments sound to normies, but the actual explanation is very simple: The American left thinks the legal system is racist because it produces unequal outcomes. Black Americans commit crimes, especially violent crime, at several times the frequency of whites, and the current left's only explanation for this is "racism" (implying that most black criminals are unfairly targeted by the system).

Anti-racism propaganda has been so successful over the past 50 years, you have white people out here engaging with rulebreaking or social-convention-violating black people as though they're going to react like a white person does. Did anyone else see that video of a bicyclist who got into a black guy's business for blocking a bike lane with his car? The moron was lucky not to get a cap popped in his ass. Even if the black guy were a white-acting professional, the bicyclist still would've been accused of racism. Think of all those Karen videos around the time of St. Floyd's death. The greatest irony is that those women were treating those black people like they thought they were white. It's no big deal for a white woman to call the cops on white people illegally barbecuing; at worst she'll be called a bitch, but if the barbecuers are black...

Now that mass incarceration is ending, whites will start relearning the rules of engagement for dealing with people who prioritize honor over dignity.
 
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