Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility
Can Democrats Be the Party of the Future Again?
d8a347b41db1ddee634e2d67d08798c102ef09ac
By The New York Times
Published 5 months ago on
January 11, 2025

FILE — Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.) in Washington, on Dec. 12, 2019. (Justin T. Gellerson/The New York Times)

Share

Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Until recently, there was nothing dissonant about the fact that the heart of Silicon Valley is represented in the House by one of the most progressive members of Congress, Ro Khanna, a close ally of Bernie Sanders. A veteran of Barack Obama’s Commerce Department, Khanna first ran for office, as Politico put it, with the “overwhelming support of the deep-pocketed tech community’s CEOs and venture capitalists,” and for years, he maintained friendly relationships with men like Elon Musk, who blurbed his first book.

He was elected in 2016, at the tail end of a period when technological progress and social progress still seemed intertwined. Republicans distrusted Big Tech almost as much as they did Hollywood and the media, while Democrats positioned themselves as the party of the future.

Silicon Valley’s Rightward Shift

That period has now come to an end. Many of the most powerful people in Silicon Valley have swung rightward, donating to Donald Trump and in some cases making their technologies more congenial to Republicans.

Musk’s X has become a font of reactionary propaganda; as apocalyptic fires ravage Los Angeles, its algorithm is filling my feed with posts claiming, falsely, that the mayor slashed the Fire Department’s budget, and insisting that conditions for the inferno were created not by climate change but by diversity initiatives.

This week, Meta’s Mark Zuckerberg announced that Facebook would eliminate outside fact-checking and allow for more racist, anti-LGBTQ+ and anti-immigrant rhetoric on the platform, arguing that the 2024 election feels “like a cultural tipping point toward once again prioritizing speech.” That’s an odd thing to say about the elevation of a man who is constantly trying to sue his critics into oblivion, but one that makes sense if you understand free speech primarily as freedom from liberal scolding.

Meanwhile, the cryptocurrency industry, having used its unfathomable resources to help knock out of Congress economic populists like Sen. Sherrod Brown of Ohio, is poised to enjoy a deregulatory bonanza under Trump, setting the stage for an orgy of dangerous financial speculation. Artificial intelligence is being employed to deny health insurance claims, smother the internet with slop and eliminate jobs.

Navigating the Ideological Transformation

Most Silicon Valley voters still seem to lean left — Khanna won reelection in November by more than 35 points — but the tech industry is increasingly a force for unaccountable oligarchy. So I was curious to speak to Khanna about how he’s navigating the ideological transformation of a milieu that was once an important part of his base.

In some ways, he’s struggled. Last month, Khanna expressed eagerness to work with the Department of Government Efficiency, the advisory panel being run by Musk and Vivek Ramaswamy. As he saw it, he was trying to propose an alternative to slash-and-burn austerity while starting a conversation about wasteful Pentagon spending. But he infuriated many left-leaning voters by seeming to treat Musk and Ramaswamy as if they were acting in good faith. And he certainly didn’t win any goodwill from Musk, who posted that it was “game over” for Khanna after he voted in early January against the Laken Riley Act, a bill to expand migrant detention.

Still, Khanna is particularly thoughtful about the relationship between progressive politics and technological innovation. And while he thinks some of the reasons for the right-wing turn among tech bigwigs are self-evident — billionaires want lower taxes and less regulation — he also thinks it should provoke Democratic introspection.

The Need for Democratic Introspection

“The government hasn’t often delivered the things we said it should deliver,” said Khanna. In the CHIPS Act, which he co-wrote, “money was allocated for rural broadband, but we don’t have much evidence that it’s actually been dispersed and working.” Joe Biden’s Inflation Reduction Act contained significant investments in American industry, but many promised factories still haven’t been built.

The administration, he said, should have chosen a few cities as demonstration projects: “Pick a community like Johnstown, Pennsylvania; or Galesburg, Illinois; or Milwaukee, Wisconsin, and say, ‘Here’s what it was, here’s a year later what we have done in this community, and here’s how it’s turned around.'” Democrats, he suggests, lost the ability to tell a coherent story about how they’re making people’s lives better.

Khanna isn’t alone, of course, in arguing that progressives have squandered public trust by failing to govern effectively; my New York Times colleague Ezra Klein has repeatedly leveled similar critiques. But Khanna is also making a broader argument, which is that Democrats have failed to conjure up a vision of the future that’s either reassuring or exciting.

“This is, I think, where we have such a challenge to present the counter to the Trump-Musk-Vance presidency, which is they’re trying to take the patina of the future and connect it with deregulation and Texas,” he said, invoking the location of Musk’s new headquarters, a state that combines social conservatism with laissez-faire economics.

Khanna continued, “What we have to do is say, ‘We get the future, we understand technology, and we have a far better vision for how technology is going to help your family, your community, and how we’re going to regulate technology.'”

Unfortunately, diagnosing an absence of vision is just a start; the hard part is the vision itself. After all, the center left is in crisis all over the developed world. This week, Canada’s Justin Trudeau became the latest liberal leader to fall, and Germany’s Olaf Scholz could be next.

The right has a clear idea of the world it wants to create, however revanchist and dystopian it might seem to its opponents. There is no similarly motivating spirit on the shellshocked left, at least outside of Latin America. Incremental change to a hated status quo is clearly insufficient, but progressives haven’t laid out a picture of comprehensive transformation that seems either workable or inspiring to most people.

Khanna sees an opportunity in the clustering of tech oligarchs around Trump. There are deep fissures in Trump’s coalition between men like Steve Bannon, who favor increased economic support for the working class, and those like Musk, who want corporations and capital to be unfettered.

If the incoming president lets himself be influenced by the Silicon Valley libertarians, said Khanna, “I think he leaves us a huge opening to say, ‘Look, this, this is the ideology that’s really failed the working and middle class, and we’re going to have a more working-class, middle-class economic approach.'”

At that point, the future may finally start to look less foreboding.

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.

By Michelle Goldberg/Justin T. Gellerson
c.2025 The New York Times Company

RELATED TOPICS:

DON'T MISS

What Are Fresno Real Estate Experts Predicting for 2025 and Beyond?

DON'T MISS

First California EV Mandates Hit Automakers This Year. Most Are Not Even Close

DON'T MISS

How Much Will Fresno Unified Trustee’s Steak Dinner Cost After FPPC Fine?

DON'T MISS

Does US Law Allow Trump to Send Troops to Quell Protests?

DON'T MISS

Republican Congressman Green to Resign After Tax Bill Vote

DON'T MISS

UN Says Most Flour Delivered in Gaza Looted or Taken by Starving People

DON'T MISS

EU Confident It Will Avoid 500% US Tariffs Tied to Russian Energy Imports

DON'T MISS

Trump Says Iran Is Involved in Gaza Hostage Negotiations

DON'T MISS

First the National Guard, Will the Marines Be Next at LA Riots?

DON'T MISS

Hundreds Peacefully Protest ICE Raids in Downtown Fresno

DON'T MISS

A Trump Family Project Spurs Resignations and a Criminal Charge in Serbia

DON'T MISS

Sly Stone, Maestro of a Multifaceted, Hitmaking Band, Dies at 82

UP NEXT

Does US Law Allow Trump to Send Troops to Quell Protests?

UP NEXT

Republican Congressman Green to Resign After Tax Bill Vote

UP NEXT

UN Says Most Flour Delivered in Gaza Looted or Taken by Starving People

UP NEXT

EU Confident It Will Avoid 500% US Tariffs Tied to Russian Energy Imports

UP NEXT

Trump Says Iran Is Involved in Gaza Hostage Negotiations

UP NEXT

First the National Guard, Will the Marines Be Next at LA Riots?

UP NEXT

Hundreds Peacefully Protest ICE Raids in Downtown Fresno

UP NEXT

A Trump Family Project Spurs Resignations and a Criminal Charge in Serbia

UP NEXT

Sly Stone, Maestro of a Multifaceted, Hitmaking Band, Dies at 82

UP NEXT

Kennedy Overhauls US CDC Vaccine Panel, Replacing All 17 Members

UN Says Most Flour Delivered in Gaza Looted or Taken by Starving People

8 hours ago

EU Confident It Will Avoid 500% US Tariffs Tied to Russian Energy Imports

8 hours ago

Trump Says Iran Is Involved in Gaza Hostage Negotiations

8 hours ago

First the National Guard, Will the Marines Be Next at LA Riots?

8 hours ago

Hundreds Peacefully Protest ICE Raids in Downtown Fresno

9 hours ago

A Trump Family Project Spurs Resignations and a Criminal Charge in Serbia

9 hours ago

Sly Stone, Maestro of a Multifaceted, Hitmaking Band, Dies at 82

9 hours ago

Kennedy Overhauls US CDC Vaccine Panel, Replacing All 17 Members

10 hours ago

Health Care Is a Lifeline. The Central Valley Deserves Better.

11 hours ago

‘Everybody Stood up’: Why a Union Leader’s Arrest Galvanized California Democrats on Immigration

12 hours ago

How Much Will Fresno Unified Trustee’s Steak Dinner Cost After FPPC Fine?

A former Fresno Unified trustee will have to pay $15,000 for not reporting a lavish steak dinner at an educators’ retreat. The Fair Po...

7 hours ago

7 hours ago

How Much Will Fresno Unified Trustee’s Steak Dinner Cost After FPPC Fine?

Members of the California National Guard stand guard, as a demonstartion against federal immigration sweeps takes place, outside the Edward R. Roybal federal building, after their deployment by U.S. President Donald Trump, in response to protests, in Los Angeles, California, U.S. June 8, 2025. REUTERS/Mike Blake
7 hours ago

Does US Law Allow Trump to Send Troops to Quell Protests?

Chairman Mark Green (R-TN) speaks as U.S. Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem testifies before a House Homeland Security hearing on the Department of Homeland Security (DHS) budget, on Capitol Hill in Washington, D.C., U.S., May 14, 2025. REUTERS/Anna Rose Layden/File Photo
7 hours ago

Republican Congressman Green to Resign After Tax Bill Vote

A view of an aid truck entering from Israel into Gaza, near the Kerem Shalom crossing near the Israeli-Gaza border, May 21, 2025. REUTERS/Amir Cohen/File Photo
8 hours ago

UN Says Most Flour Delivered in Gaza Looted or Taken by Starving People

The European Union is confident it will avoid harsh economic fallout from a U.S. Senate bill proposing 500% tariffs on importers of Russian energy, citing its ongoing efforts to phase out such imports. (Shutterstock)
8 hours ago

EU Confident It Will Avoid 500% US Tariffs Tied to Russian Energy Imports

President Donald Trump speaks during an Invest America Roundtable in the State Dining room, at the White House, in Washington, U.S., June 9, 2025. REUTERS/Evelyn Hockstein
8 hours ago

Trump Says Iran Is Involved in Gaza Hostage Negotiations

8 hours ago

First the National Guard, Will the Marines Be Next at LA Riots?

9 hours ago

Hundreds Peacefully Protest ICE Raids in Downtown Fresno

Help continue the work that gets you the news that matters most.

Search

Send this to a friend