The Left Didn’t Sink Kamala Harris. Here's What Did.

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The Left Didn’t Sink Kamala Harris. Here's What Did.

It’s easier to blame activists, but far more powerful forces have led Democrats 
to neglect the real crises facin...
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The Left Didn’t Sink Kamala Harris. Here’s What Did.
It’s easier to blame activists, but far more powerful forces have led Democrats 
to neglect the real crises facing Americans.
Waleed Shahid
In the aftermath of Kamala Harris’s loss, many pundits and politicians are 
turning to a familiar scapegoat. Critics like Adam Jentleson, a former aide to 
senators Harry Reid and John Fetterman, claim that “woke” advocacy groups made 
emocrats adopt extreme policies and drove voters away from the Democratic 
Party, sealing Donald Trump’s victory. But the truth is simpler—and more 
uncomfortable for the Democratic establishment. Despite the noise, voters 
didn’t reject Harris because of leftist rhetoric or activist slogans. They 
rejected her because she and her party failed to address the economic pain of 
working-class voters, who chose change over more of the same.
There’s a generation of Black and brown organizers, often the first in their 
families to step into positions of power, navigating institutions historically 
dominated by others. Alongside them are downwardly mobile white millennials, 
raised with expectations ofstability but battered by an economy that delivers 
none. These activists, working within nonprofits and campaigns, fighting for 
causes once central to Democratic values, have somehow becomescapegoats for the 
party’s electoral woes.
Why, after every electoral loss, is the left always the scapegoat? It’s easier 
to blame activists for pushing a progressive agenda than confront the real 
issue: the Democratic Party has long been shaped by far more powerful 
forces—corporate interests, lobbyists, and consultants—whose influence has 
neglected the real crises facing everyday Americans. We see this cycle again 
and again.
Contrary to establishment narratives, the Democratic leadership has often 
resisted advocacy organizations pushing for bold reforms on immigration, Big 
Tech, climate, debt, healthcare, rent, mass incarceration, Palestinian rights, 
and for policies like the Build Back Better agenda. This tension isn’t just 
about differing priorities—it reveals the actual balance of forces in the 
party.Corporate donors on Wall Street and Silicon Valley pour billions into 
campaigns, shaping agendas to suit their interests. A consultant class reaps 
millions from flawed strategies and failed candidates yet continues to fail 
upward, perpetuating a pattern of mediocrity. They, not progressives, are the 
roadblock preventing Democrats from becoming a populist force that could 
disrupt the status quo and win back voters of all stripes.
It was these elements within the party that kneecapped the Democrats’ most 
ambitious efforts to help ordinary Americans. The Biden administration entered 
with huge plans, notably Build Back Better, which would have delivered 
immediate relief: expanded child tax credits, free community college, universal 
child care and pre-K, paid leave, and more. Progressives pushed mightily for 
Build Back Better to pass. It was centrist obstruction—namely Senators Manchin 
and Sinema—that blocked those policies. The result was a patchwork of long-term 
measures like the Inflation Reduction Act and the Bipartisan Infrastructure 
Deal, whose benefits won’t be felt until 2025 at the earliest, if at all. By 
failing to pass Build Back Better, Democrats lost the chance to deliver 
easy-to-understand, tangible economic benefits and solidify their image as the 
party of working people.
And it was corporate Democrats—particularly lobbyists like Harris’s 
brother-in-law, former Uber executive Tony West, and David Plouffe—who held the 
most sway over Harris’s campaign. They advised her to cozy up to ultra-wealthy 
celebrities, Liz and Dick Cheney, and Mark Cuban, and avoid populist rhetoric 
that could have distanced her from the corporate elites who dominate the party. 
In 2024, the biggest spenders in Democratic Party politics weren’t 
progressives—it was AIPAC, cryptocurrency PACs, and corporate giants like Uber, 
all of whom poured millions into Democratic campaigns without regard for public 
opinion or the will of the people.
The Harris campaign’s messaging failed because, while populist economic appeals 
resonated with voters, the public face of the campaign was discouraged from 
embracing them. Instead, the focus was on issues like democracy and abortion, 
which, while important, couldn’t by themselves capture the priorities of 
working-class voters. In her public remarks and interviews, Harris, drawing on 
the advice of corporate leaders, frequently adopted a Wall Street–friendly tone 
that resonated with business interests, even if it alienated many of her core 
supporters.
It’s easy to forget that in 2020, Democrats saw historic turnout, driven 
largely by young voters who were energized by the largestleft-wing and Black 
freedom protests since the 1960s. Biden won, and Democrats seemed to capture 
the nation’s hunger for justice and change, even as protesters marched with 
polarizing slogans like “Defund the Police.” Despite the controversy 
surrounding these messages, Biden triumphed decisively, calling for racial 
justice. The energy in the streets reflected a moment of possibility, a vision 
that real change was within reach. But by 2024, that grassroots energy had 
dissipated, and the Biden-Harris administration did little to revive it.
The loss of energy that Biden and Harris presided over showed up in youth 
turnout, which dropped to 42 percent in 2024, down from 50 percent in 2020 and 
closer to 2016 levels. However, battleground states saw higher youth turnout, 
around 50 percent. Young voters favored Harris over Trump by four points (51 
percent to 47 percent), a sharp decline from Biden’s 25-point lead in 2020. The 
administration’s failure to offer a compelling narrative or deliver meaningful 
economic reforms alienated many young voters, especially on issues like 
unconditional weapons transfers to Israel. Trump capitalized on this vacuum 
with false promises and an anti-war message. Meanwhile, young workers, hit 
hardest by inflation and stagnant wages, saw little relief from the 
administration’s policies, leaving them feeling unseen and unmotivated. The 
simplest explanation may be the most accurate:after four years in opposition, 
Democrats under Biden had no plan for countering centrist obstruction from 
Manchin and Sinema. Nor did they have a clear strategy for transitioning to a 
new candidate, as Biden once suggested, or supporting a contested 2024 primary.
This disconnect was made worse by the administration’s lackluster communication 
strategy. Biden has avoided the media more than any modern president. In 
contrast, Mexico’s President Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) dominated the 
narrative with daily, three-hour, entertaining, and combative press conferences 
that have earned him one of the largest YouTube followings in Mexico. AMLO’s 
approach to the attention economy helped his party to secure another 
presidential term, defying global anti-incumbent trends.
Biden and Harris’s reluctance to embrace what some Democratic elites might view 
as “tasteless” or “uncouth” populist appeals allowed their opponents to seize 
the public’s attention, creating a void that ultimately drained the 
administration of the energy and momentum it once had. Trump’s simple, 
emotionally charged narrative about fixing the economy, winding down foreign 
wars, restoring order, and protecting “traditional” American values may have 
been filled with bigotry and lies. But it commanded the public discourse, 
pushing the Biden-Harris administration off center stage.
It’s true that some younger leftists embrace purity politics. But as Semafor’s 
Benjy Sarlin points out, the most polarizing moments in recent Democratic 
campaigns—like Beto O’Rourke’s “Hell yes” remark on gun confiscation or Julián 
Castro’s call to decriminalize border crossings during the 2020 primaries—were 
driven by the candidates themselves, not external activist pressure. Why did 
Kamala Harris take the positions she did in 2019? Because she was trying to 
distinguish herself in a crowded Democratic primary, where Bernie Sanders and 
Elizabeth Warren were surging and Biden seemed to have the center locked down. 
Ultimately, these moves were about gaining media attention in a competitive 
primary, not a direct result of pressure from advocacy groups—many of which, 
like Sunrise Movement, Working Families Party, and Justice Democrats, with 
which I was affiliated, have spent years working within the system to create 
lasting change and deliver real policy results that resonate with voters.
The backlash against “wokeness” often rests on vague critiques, offering little 
more than cultural hand-wringing without any clear solutions. And when those 
solutions do emerge, they’re often morally indefensible. Jentleson’s criticism 
of progressive advocacy groups rings especially hollow when you consider the 
track record of his own political mentors. In 2010, his former boss, Harry 
Reid, publicly opposed the “Ground Zero mosque,” a proposed Islamic cultural 
center near the World Trade Center. While technically acknowledging the 
developers’ rights, Reid capitulated to Republican culture wars by suggesting 
Muslim Americans build the mosque elsewhere. This wasn’t a principled stance—it 
was a political maneuver that lent legitimacy to Islamophobia, feeding into 
narratives from figures like Sarah Palin and Newt Gingrich, who compared the 
center to a Nazi building next tothe Holocaust Museum. In doing so, Reid 
allowed bigotry to flourish, leaving a vulnerable community to bear the brunt 
of political scapegoating.

>From asylum seekers to transgender rights, today’s debates mirror the “Ground 
>Zero mosque” controversy. From 2017 to 2020, Democrats, including Harris, were 
>eager to condemn Trump’s cruel immigration policies. Now, however, they seem 
>more focused on dodging the topic altogether. These are issues demanding a new 
>approach, one that emphasizes year-round persuasion and agenda-setting over 
>political convenience. Thermostatic public opinion might be a reality of 
>politics, but voters appreciate when you stand for something with conviction 
>and authenticity.
This is where movements and parties work best together: movements push the 
boundaries of what’s possible, creating the political space to reframe issues 
like transgender rights and immigration in majoritarian terms, and politicians 
follow when the political weather aligns with their self-interest. These two 
sides will clash, but it’s in that tension that progress lies. Democrats can’t 
be scared of that process. They must stop ceding thenarrative to far-right 
framing and instead invest in populist campaigns that aren’t afraid to 
antagonize villains, highlight the humanity of marginalized communities, and 
expose the RepublicanParty’s divide-and-conquer tactics. Only then can they 
build the political power necessary to shift the conversation and secure 
realchange.
Anyone who knows me knows I’m critical of the academic jargon and misguided 
tactics that sometimes dominate activist circles. But to blame activists for 
the party’s struggles is to overlook the much larger battles they’re engaged 
in: 11 million undocumented Americans left in limbo, a prison system that 
incarcerates more people than any other in history, and an economy where three 
people hold more wealth than the bottom half of the country. These are the 
moral tests of our time—tests that any party claiming to stand for justice will 
be judged by. Scapegoating those pushing for change isn’t just unfair; it’s 
counterproductive, fracturing necessary coalitions and undermining theability 
of the party to tackle the crises ahead.
Harris’s defeat should prompt serious introspection for Democrats—but not the 
narrow, one-sided critique Jentleson offers. Everyone, including progressive 
advocacy groups, has lessons to learn. The path forward isn’t about 
hippie-punching—it never has been. Time and again, the center-left’s response 
to electoral defeat has been to blame the unpopular and disruptive activists 
pushing for progress, whether abolitionists, suffragettes, labor unions, civil 
rights leaders, orenvironmentalists.

History reveals that oversimplified approaches often sidestep the harder 
questions. Success doesn’t come from rejecting the complexity of a diverse 
coalition but from learning to navigate it. To win, Democrats must inspire the 
public in a fractured information age, engage meaningfully with the cultural 
shifts around race, gender, family, and migration, make democracy work despite 
obstructionists like Manchin and Sinema, and—most critically—deliver tangible 
results that improve people’s lives. And if the corporate, status quo–loving 
forces within the party are standing in the way of that mission, they must be 
moved aside.
Success will come not by pointing fingers but by telling a story of 
transformation—with clear villains, bold vision, and conviction that democracy 
can, indeed, make a difference. 



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