The Democrat Party is now afraid of the monsters they created. After years of radicalizing their base with far-left ideology, pushing extreme cultural policies, and silencing dissent, cracks are beginning to show in their own ranks.

Rep. Seth Moulton (D-MA) stunned CNN viewers when he openly admitted that the Democrat Party has alienated the majority of Americans by catering to radical activists instead of listening to voters.

In an interview with far-left reporter Pamela Brown, Moulton pointed out how the party’s obsession with leftist purity tests—especially on issues like transgender athletes in women’s sports—has made Democrats completely out of touch with reality.

Pamela Brown:
Well, listen, as we were talking about, there is a lot of dissatisfaction among voters right now—among Democrats—reflected in the numbers. CNN’s latest polling shows the Democratic Party’s favorability rating stands at 29%. That is a record low in our polling history. Plus, among Democratic voters, 77% say Democratic members are doing too little to oppose Trump. That second number really stands out to me, and it makes you ask the question: In your view, specifically, where have Democrats failed?

Seth Moulton:
Well, we’re failing on two levels, and I go back to the two things I believe Democrats should be doing today. One is standing up more effectively to Trump…

But the second thing we have to do is actually make some reforms to the party, because we lost this election across the board—an election that should have been easy for us to win. When in our history have we ever run against a convicted felon sitting at the top of the ticket? This past election should have been an easy one for Democrats, and yet we lost across the board because so many Americans said, “You guys are just out of touch.”

Moulton’s biggest confession came when he admitted that Democrats are terrified to challenge the radical left, fearing political exile if they dare question the party’s extremist cultural agenda.

Pamela Brown:
How do you reform yourself, though, to be more in touch with the everyday American person, like you say?

Seth Moulton:
Well, I’ll tell you what—we’ve become a party of people who preach down to others, who scold them, who say, “If you don’t agree with me, you’re not only wrong, but you’re a bad person.” I think all of us have heard that attitude from many national Democrats in the past couple of years.

So I think we need to stop preaching and start listening—start meeting Americans where they are. Don’t take these minority positions on cultural issues and say, “Hey, if you don’t meet this strict liberal litmus test, then you’re not even a Democrat.”

When I questioned whether we should at least just have a debate about rules for sports—whether transgender women should compete on the same level as girls’ sports teams—I got accosted. I got told by people, “You’re not even a Democrat.” Well, that’s the problem with our party. You can’t be a majority party if you don’t accept a majority of views.

On this particular issue, 80% of Americans disagree with this liberal litmus test—a checkbox for Democrats on this view. So we’ve got to be a lot smarter in listening to Americans. My job is to represent Americans—not tell them what to think, but actually represent their interests in Congress.

Seth Moulton:
And I think if more Democrats took that approach—took that view—we’d be much more successful as a party.

Pamela Brown:
It’s interesting, too, because, as you well know, Governor Newsom came around to your view on that particular issue.

Seth Moulton:
And I’ll tell you what—I’ve heard from so many colleagues behind the scenes, “You’re right, Seth. You’re right. Thank you for…” I wrote a big op-ed in The Washington Post about this. “I totally agree with you.” But they all say it whispering, because they’re so afraid to say it out in public—lest they be accosted by the liberal left in our party.

WATCH:



Read the full article here

Share.
Leave A Reply

Exit mobile version