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“I’m not a member of any organized political party; I’m a Democrat,” quipped Will Rogers.
The line might bring a smile to Ken Martin, who while campaigning to chair the Democratic National Committee pledged to be the “organizer-in-chief” of the beleaguered party. Indeed, the status of the Democrats lends itself more to humility than humor. Because the party is out of power and out of favor; Republicans, in a first, lead in party affiliation for the third straight year, according to Gallup. What’s worse is their worst-ever showing in a Quinnipiac poll: A 26-percentage point gap (gulf, really) in the party’s favorability rating, with a 31% approval/57% disapproval rating.
Martin, the longtime leader of Minnesota’s Democratic-Farmer-Labor (DFL) Party, will try to invert those numbers — and Will Rogers’ characterization — with a “build to win,” “build to expand” and “build to last” strategy, according to the DNC announcement of his election. This includes funding parties in every state, “going on offense everywhere, contesting every race,” and “planning, organizing, and implementing a 10-year strategy to align the infrastructure, partnerships, and people we need to win.”
Martin led the DFL for 14 years and acted on this ethos, helping the party win a governing trifecta (until an exacta of state Senate and House challenges paralyzed the 2025 Legislature). But he — and more pointedly, the party — doesn’t have the luxury of time to counter the Trump administration’s political and policy blitzkrieg.
“This is not the time to play rope-a-dope,” said Norman Ornstein, senior fellow emeritus at the American Enterprise Institute.
Martin himself used a boxing metaphor to DNC delegates, saying that Democrats “were punched in the mouth” but that they’d “get off the mat and get back in this fight.”