An ongoing debate over the past and future of the Democratic party has taken on new urgency this month after Randi Weingarten, the president of the American Federation of Teachers, announced she would not rejoin the Democratic National Committee as a member-at-large moving forward. Her resignation, alongside that of labor leader Lee Saunders, is the latest body blow for the DNC. Whether these moves could lead to real changes at the highest levels of Democratic politics depends on what leaders do next.
'New strategies, new thinking' "I appear to be out of step with the leadership you are forging," Weingarten said in her resignation letter to DNC Chair Ken Martin. She and Saunders seem to regard the DNC as an "inward-looking body" that has "failed to innovate," said The New York Times. And by leaving the DNC, the two former party officials have issued a "major rebuke" to Martin, representing a "significant erosion of trust" in the party that's "locked out of power and grappling for a message."
"These are new times. They demand new strategies, new thinking and a renewed way of fighting for the values we hold dear," said Saunders in his resignation letter. "We must evolve to meet the urgency of this moment." Weingarten cited difficulties "enlarging our tent" and frustrations around "actively trying to engage more and more of our communities."
The dual departures show the party "embroiled in factional disputes," said Politico. The episode will "only further finger-pointing" and "intensify criticism among Democrats."
They are also a "major setback" for the party's relationship with organized labor, a "cornerstone of its electoral coalition," said Newsweek. Still, it remains to be seen how electorally damaging they will be. In her resignation letter, Weingarten said that her American Federation of Teachers union would remain focused on "electing pro-public education" and "pro-working family candidates" and promised the group would remain "especially engaged in the 2025-26 elections."
Sick of drama Although "history suggests" that as the party out of power Democrats are in a prime position to pick up congressional seats in 2026, the "multiple fractures" facing the DNC present a "real risk," said The Hill. The party will also have to "contend with a number of high-profile primaries in the year ahead."
"I think people are sick of hearing about drama at the DNC," said party Vice Chair Malcolm Kenyatta at MSNBC. But "one thing is crystal clear," he said. "I know where we must be as a party, and that's on the side of working people and working families." |