During the recent gathering of Democrat Party bosses in Minneapolis, there was no shortage of deranged rhetoric, usually about the dark doings of the “dictator” Trump. But the most delusional diatribe was delivered by DNC Chair Ken Martin, who unintentionally captured why Democrats have been unable to recover from their drubbing last November – and why their prospects aren’t much better moving forward.
Martin opened the first session of the three-day meeting with a predictably dull speech full of progressive platitudes and mangled metaphors that ended with this bizarre call to arms: “The Democratic Party has to stop trying to win arguments over policy and politics and do more to win future elections.”
If the Democrats are dumb enough to pursue that strategy – which is precisely what lost them the presidency, House, and Senate last November – they will fail to win back either house of the U.S. Congress in the 2026 midterms, thus preserving the Republican trifecta at least until the end of President Trump’s term in 2029.
Historically, the most successful candidates for public office pursue the reverse of Martin’s strategy. They typically win elections by building their campaigns around carefully-considered combinations of popular policies and savvy politics. That the Chair of the DNC doesn’t seem to understand such an obvious reality explains a number of problems Democrats are facing – not the least of which is his inability to convince donors to contribute to their party.
According to a new Ballotpedia report, the DNC’s cash on hand decreased from $15.2 million on June 30 to $13.9 million by July 31, while the RNC’s cash on hand increased from $80.7 million to $84.3 million during the same time period. The Democrats are also far behind the GOP in the quest for super PAC donations. The New York Times reports, “President Trump’s super PAC is sitting on about $200 million that it can spend against his rivals, giving a term-limited president a never-before-seen amount of power in his party’s finances and future.”
And it gets even worse for the Democrats as the midterms appear on the horizon. According to an NBC report, “GOP megadonors are engaged in the fight for Congress, steering $59.2 million to the main two super PACs involved in House and Senate races aligned with GOP leadership, Senate Leadership Fund and the Congressional Leadership Fund.” At the end of the most recent reporting period, the Republican House and Senate PACs had $62 million cash on hand while their Democrat counterparts had $35.8 million in the bank.
Such disparities should terrify any DNC Chair, but Martin is obviously in denial. AP quotes him as follows concerning the 2026 election cycle: “Money will not be the ultimate determinant in this (midterm) election.” If that is true, why did he qualify that claim by boasting, “We’ve been making investments, record investments, in our state parties”? Moreover, he further confused his interlocutors with this demonstrably counterfactual assertion: “We have the money to operate. We’re not in a bad position.”
In reality, of course, the Democrats are in the midst of an existential crisis, and Ken Martin’s incompetent leadership at the DNC is making it worse. He’s clearly a major cause of his party’s money problems, and he is against engaging in arguments over policy within his own party or with the Republicans. Merely declaring that he wants to do “more to win future elections” will likely produce the opposite result in a midterm cycle that would normally favor the out party.
Unsurprisingly, Democrat leaders are ambivalent about Martin. According to CNN:
“CNN’s conversations with over three dozen Democratic elected officials, top aides, donors, DNC insiders and other leading party figures reveal Martin’s paradox: The state party chairs and other insiders who chose Martin as chair think he’s doing great, while many of the leaders and strategists otherwise charged with trying to get the party back into shape tell CNN they barely think of him… Those who like Martin and those who don’t describe him as constantly feeling he’s being messed around with and underestimated, out to prove he’s a bigger deal.”
Martin, on the other hand, insists that he is not concerned about the opinions of those who disapprove of the job he’s doing. “I could give a sh*t about people right now in terms of people who are pissing on me, because at the end of the day, I have one goal. And that is winning elections,” he bluntly told CNN.
This attitude suggests that he doesn’t realize he is no longer back in Minnesota running the Democratic-Farmer-Labor Party. He has now moved to a place where it is well known that anyone who wants a friend should go out and buy a dog.
All signs point to Martin not lasting very long as DNC Chair. Last February, he defeated Wisconsin Democratic Party Chair Ben Wikler for the post, despite the latter’s strong support from donors as well as Democrat luminaries such as Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries, and former Speaker Nancy Pelosi. This was a clear indication that the Democrat Party’s old guard is losing its grip on power. The delegates wanted a very aggressive and progressive DNC Chair.
That’s what they got with Martin, whose rhetoric portended a culture change at the DNC. As he declared at the time, “I’ve always viewed my role as a chair of the Democratic Party to take the low road, so my candidates and elected officials can take the high road, meaning, I’m going to throw a punch.”
But after six months, it’s pretty obvious that he didn’t expect to receive so many haymakers from inside his own party. He’s now playing in the big leagues, where no one wins elections without money, palatable policies, and genuine allies.
To be sure, Martin may have inherited an impossible job. Managing the ever-widening gulf between the party’s emergent progressive wing and the old guard would be a daunting task for any political operator. Moreover, Martin took over a party whose image had been battered by the cover-up of Joe Biden’s cognitive decline and the subsequent un-democratic anointment of Kamala Harris as his replacement – who then went on to lose to Trump in humiliating fashion.
All of this is, of course, great news for the Republicans. If Martin’s tenure as DNC Chair continues to be characterized by empty coffers and contentious relationships within the DNC and his party as a whole, he’s a goner. But, with any luck, he will doggedly hang on until it’s too late for the Democrats to save themselves from a disastrous midterm loss.
David Catron is a Senior Editor at the American Spectator. His writing has also appeared in PJ Media, the American Thinker, the Providence Journal, the Catholic Exchange and a variety of other publications.
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