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HomePolitics & PolicyProgressive Economic Populism Is A Winning Issue

Progressive Economic Populism Is A Winning Issue

By Sonali Kolhatkar, CounterPunch

The re-election of Donald Trump reignited a simmering feud between the progressive and centrist wings of the Democratic Party. While centrists have cautioned against alienating “moderate” voters, progressives have urged the party to rally around universal health care, raising wages, and other populist measures.

If recent elections are any indication, moder­ate voters seem plenty receptive to progres­sive appeals.

Newly minted Rep. Analilia Mejia recently won a special election for New Jersey’s 11th district in the House of Representatives. Mejia replaces moderate Democrat Mikie Sherill, who vacated her seat in the affluent, suburban district after winning the state’s gubernatorial election.

Mejia gave a fiery inaugural address on April 20 calling on her colleagues to “Stand up, defend, and restore not only our democracy, but also a just economy that actually works for work­ing people.”

Mejia has built a political career championing economic populism. Not only did she serve as Sen­ator Bernie Sanders’ 2020 campaign political direc­tor, but was also co-exec­utive director of the Cen­ter for Popular Democracy and director of the New Jersey Working Families Alliance.

Poll after poll shows majorities of the public back taxing corporations and the very rich, prefer a Medicare for All health­care system to our patch­work private insurance system, and are deeply concerned about climate change. Mejia says that makes those issues good politics as well as policy.

I talked to Mejia in the run-up to the 2022 mid­terms. “The policies that really motivate peo­ple, that work for working families,” she told me then, “are also popular ideas.”

She’s right. This year, Mejia won her subur­ban district handily, beating out Republicans and more centrist or conservative Democrats. Her populist, morally unambiguous platform included a demand to abolish Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) and a denun­ciation of Israel’s genocide in Gaza.

In November 2026, Mejia will run for the same congressional seat, facing Republican candi­date Joe Hathaway, a man who labeled her a “radical socialist.”

But there’s nothing radical about popular pro­grams that address affordability.

Pundits have claimed for years that tacking to the center is a surefire way to win political power. When Vice President Kamala Harris ran for president on a centrist campaign in 2024, many explained her loss to Donald Trump as the result of her identityrather than her politics.

But centrism means preserving the status quo — and the status quo is a failure for most Amer­icans. Sharp analysts such as Tressie McMillan Cottom identified the real reason Harris lost, saying her “promise was that nothing much would change about the country but the race and gender of the one in charge.”

At a time when some members of her Har­ris’s party are giving in to a white suprema­cist resurgence by backing away from people of color in positions of power, Mejia leans into her racial and ethnic identity to connect with voters of all backgrounds. “I am the daughter of a Dominican factory worker and a Colum­bian seamstress who knew struggle,” she said during her inaugural speech.

Indeed, candidates like Mejia — and progres­sive populist politicians such as Rep. Delia Ramirez (D-IL), Rep. Summer Lee (D-PA), and New York Mayor Zohran Mamdani — have proven that demographic diversity is not a liability for candidates who embrace jus­tice-driven platforms and take principled stands on issues.

“The ideas that we support are popular ideas, are transformative ideas, and if we get together and raise our voices, we can and must win,” Mejia told me in 2022. “Everything depends on it.”

She added, “Democracy is not a spectator sport. You have to jump in and participate.” And that’s precisely what she did.

Sonali Kolhatkar is the founder, host and exec­utive producer of “Rising Up With Sonali,” a television and radio show that airs on Free Speech TV (Dish Network, DirecTV, Roku) and Pacifica stations KPFK, KPFA, and affiliates.

This editorial was originally published in CounterPunch.

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