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The Democratic Party dreamed of an invincible coalition. Trump turned it into dust

The Democratic Party dreamed of an invincible coalition. Trump turned it into dust

In the final months of the presidential campaign, Trump’s team made the vice president’s past support for taxpayer-funded gender reassignment surgeries on federal prisoners and detained immigrants a central focus.

One ad ended with the following statement: “Kamala is for them. “President Trump is for you.”

The Trump campaign spent more than $21 million on transgender issues ads in the first half of October, according to data compiled by AdImpact. This is about a third of all advertising spending and almost double the amount spent on immigration and inflation.

This is the kind of investment a campaign makes when it has hard data showing that its ads are moving public opinion.

Rep. Seth Moulton, a moderate lawmaker from Massachusetts, said his party must rethink its approach to cultural issues after Trump’s convincing victory.

Moulton told the New York Times: “Democrats spend too much time trying not to offend anyone rather than being brutally honest about the problems facing many Americans., external “I have two young daughters, and I don’t want them to be run over on the playground by men or former male athletes. But as a Democrat, I’m afraid to say that.”

Progressive Democrats, meanwhile, reject this characterization and argue that defending minority rights has always been a core value of the party. Rep. John Moran wrote in response to, external: “If you’re going to use election loss as an opportunity to attack the most vulnerable, you should find another job.”

Political strategist Mike Madrid offered a harsh assessment of where the Democratic coalition stands today.

“The Democratic Party was premised on what was an unholy alliance between working-class people of color and wealthy white progressives,” Madrid said. “The only glue that held that coalition together was anti-republicanism.”

When the glue ran out, he said, the party was ready to lose.

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