“I didn’t go to college, worked in a tire factory, and eventually became
a union man. I have a criminal record, and I have been a single father
for 35 years,” Rocha recalled in his Globe article. “But I
joined the Democratic Party because it actually represents the
principles President-elect Donald Trump claims he stands for but that he
clearly does not. I wanted to fight against exporting US jobs overseas,
to drain the Washington, D.C., swamp of rich, powerful people who think
they are better than the rest of us, and to stop spending taxes on
foreign wars when there are plenty of problems at home. And I have
remained a Democrat to protect my mother, who relies on Social Security,
and my son, a union steamfitter and single father who needs child-care
assistance for his twin boys. I want to ensure my grandchildren inherit a
planet without war, or one burning up from climate change.”
______________________________________________________
https://www.bostonglobe.com/2024/12/05/opinion/democrats-trump-gallego-latino-voters/
Here’s what the Democratic Party needs to do to win back voters like me
By Chuck RochaUpdated December 5, 2024, 11:17 a.m.
If you listen to how Republicans describe Democrats, you might never imagine I could be one.
I
come from Tyler, Texas. My papaw, my grandfather, had a small working
farm where we grew big sweet onions and corn. I didn’t go to college,
worked in a tire factory, and eventually became a union man. I have a
criminal record, and I have been a single father for 35 years.
But
I joined the Democratic Party because it actually represents the
principles President-elect Donald Trump claims he stands for but that he
clearly does not. I wanted to fight against exporting US jobs overseas,
to drain the Washington, D.C., swamp of rich, powerful people who think
they are better than the rest of us, and to stop spending taxes on
foreign wars when there are plenty of problems at home.
And I have remained a Democrat to protect my
mother, who relies on Social Security, and my son, a union steamfitter
and single father who needs child-care assistance for his twin boys. I
want to ensure my grandchildren inherit a planet without war, or one
burning up from climate change.
But to do
those things, the party must regain power in Washington — and that will
require that it return to the working-class values that made me join it
in the first place. I know we can do this from personal experience — as
an adviser to the presidential campaign of Senator Bernie Sanders; as
the founder of a political action committee to turn out Latino voters;
and this year, as a senior adviser to Ruben Gallego, who won his race
for US Senate in Arizona even though Trump won the state handily.
I had considered running to be chair
of the Democratic National Committee, but I have withdrawn my name from
consideration because I want to work at the grass-roots level to fix
the party — and not spend all my time fund-raising. But here are the
things I think the DNC must do to take back Congress in 2026 and the
White House in 2028.
Our
extensive polling and focus groups showed voters connected with
Gallego’s authentic narrative of being a US Marine and combat veteran
who was raised by a single mother. He also met voters where they were: a
Canelo Alvarez prize fight watch party at a boxing gym, town halls in
Spanish, and community events featuring carne asada and beers. That’s not politics as usual — but believe me, it worked.
That tells
me that the Democratic Party would benefit from dropping all college
requirements for staffing jobs inside the DNC and encouraging state
parties to do the same. Why? Because diversity is not just the color of
your skin but also your lived experience.
If
you only have a room full of folks with master’s degrees, they’re all
going to go back to the same research they learned in their political
science classes. I would rather have someone working for the party who
never went to college but has interesting life experiences and a couple
of campaigns under their belt than someone who relies too heavily on
polling because they’ve lost touch with real Americans.
As
a starting point, the party should choose a leader who supports a true
50-state campaign plan that doesn’t ignore “flyover” states. That leader
should be willing to devote extra resources to rural and Latino parts
of the country, starting in the southwest so we can win back Nevada and
Arizona.
It
will also be important to allocate resources for state parties to hire
full-time, year-round organizing staff. They should be open to hiring
new consulting firms that bring a fresh approach to campaigns. This
could also result in more firms led by Black and Latino strategists.
Need I remind the party that Black and Latino men voted for Trump in
higher numbers this year than in 2016 or 2020? If party resources keep
going to the same professional consultant class who fail up, even when
we lose, the Democratic Party will continue to sputter.
The
DNC should also create a new messaging commission to help rebrand
itself leading up to the 2028 elections. I’m not talking about hiring an
agency in New York City to come up with a snazzy new logo but a full-on
reinvention of how Democrats should communicate their message.
Lastly, we need to make the Democratic Party cool again.
We
need to be fun and not so damn preachy and judgmental of everyone and
everything. When we had the big, rollicking, open tent under Barack
Obama, we won big. But in recent years, Republicans have done a better
job of recruiting popular college students to promote their message and
talk about why people should be proud to be Americans.
Appealing
to working-class men might make some progressives in the party
uncomfortable. But this is necessary work that will enable Democrats to
curtail Trump’s power in the 2026 midterms and take back the White House
in 2028.
If
we don’t do that work, Democrats should be prepared to watch where JD
Vance or Marco Rubio take the country after Trump slinks back to
Mar-a-Lago.
Chuck Rocha served as a senior adviser to Senator-elect Ruben Gallego, a Democrat from Arizona.
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