Posted on Thursday, November 20, 2025
|
by Mike Marlowe
|
19 Comments
|
Democrats have finally found something they can all agree on: They have absolutely no idea who’s in charge of their party.
According to a new Politico poll, when voters who supported Kamala Harris in 2024 were asked who the leader of the Democrat Party is, the top answer was – drumroll, please – “I don’t know.” The runner-up? “Nobody.”
At least we know what Democrats’ next campaign slogan should be: “None of the Above 2028.”
Only 16 percent of Harris voters – people who literally voted for her to lead the country just one year ago – think she’s the leader of her own party. That’s roughly the same percentage of Democrats who can name a single thing she’s accomplished during her three decades in politics.
One Democrat strategist, apparently having a rare moment of honesty, confessed, “I couldn’t tell you who the leader of the Democratic Party is, and I work in Democratic politics.” Translation: “Democrats are in deep trouble.”
Among the other “leaders” voters named were Gavin Newsom, the man who turned California into a post-apocalyptic film set; Barack Obama, phoning in from his $12 million oceanfront mansion to warn us about climate change; Joe Biden, still napping on a beach in Delaware; and “other name or unclear name” at two percent, doubling up Hillary Clinton at one percent.
Even Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez got a mention, because apparently, going viral on TikTok now counts as leadership experience for Democrats.
This is the party that once promised to be “the adults in the room” and proclaimed an “emerging Democratic majority” that would govern in perpetuity.
And things are about to get worse. Nancy Pelosi just announced she won’t seek reelection after nearly 40 years in Congress. For all her many faults, she was undoubtedly a leadership figure in the party for decades as Democrats’ iron-fisted matriarch (and one of the most profitable stock traders in the world).
Pelosi’s exit is the perfect metaphor for Democrats’ predicament. The ringmaster is going home, and now the clowns and a couple of bearded ladies are left to run the entire circus.
Meanwhile, on the Republican side, there’s no confusion at all. Asked the same question about who leads the GOP, more than 81 percent of Trump voters said the President is the undisputed leader of the Republican Party. More importantly, there is an emerging consensus that Vice President JD Vance is in the on-deck circle with Trump term-limited. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, once seen as a potential Vance rival in 2028, is privately telling people that he will back the VP if he runs for president, according to a recent report.
In other words, the top contenders who once represented rival wings of the party – Rubio, the more traditional conservative, Vance, the nationalist/populist – are now allied behind President Trump’s vision for America. Haters complain that Trump shattered the old GOP, and he did. But he is also reforging the pieces into something much more united and effective.
Democrats, by contrast, are in the midst of an identity crisis so severe it couldn’t be fixed by Sigmund Freud himself. They’ve got no leader, no message, and no idea how to talk to anyone outside of an Antifa riot or a college faculty lounge. The poll asked, “Who’s the leader of your party?” and the collective answer was a shoulder shrug.
When Republicans talk about 2028, it’s a spirited conversation about leadership. When Democrats talk about 2028, it’s a full-blown panic attack.
The Rubio-Vance alliance could be a glimpse of the next generation of serious leaders. It’s the opposite of the Democratic bench, which looks more like a clown car full of diversity hires than a team of players ready to get in the game.
And the best part? Even Democrats know it. One Harris voter in the Politico poll responded, “Ugh, no one,” when asked who leads the party. That might be the most accurate political analysis we’ve heard from a Democrat all year.
The Democrat Party has been like a cult that lost its messiah ever since Barack Obama left the White House. Biden’s brain broke, Harris never had one, and Pelosi is smart enough to get out of town while the gettin’ is good. They’ve got no ideas, no charisma, and no one willing to take the blame.
Democrats’ crisis isn’t that they lost to Trump yet again. It’s that the party has defined itself entirely by what it’s against. Democrats have no ideology beyond “We Hate Trump.” The only thing holding the coalition together is hatred, and you can’t govern on that – at least not for very long.
Come 2028, Democrats’ biggest problem may well be that they can’t nominate “None of the Above” for president and have to settle for someone far less popular.
Mike Marlowe is the pen name of a writer based in Texas.
Read the full article here






Leave a Reply