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DSA Coalition Winning Voters of All Races Under 50, Analysis Shows

Breaking Points · Dem Establishment FREAKS As DSA Threatens 2028 Takeover · July 2, 2026
DSA Coalition Winning Voters of All Races Under 50, Analysis Shows
Breaking Points
Breaking Points
Dem Establishment FREAKS As DSA Threatens 2028 Takeover
"They're not just winning white voters or white voters under 50. They're winning voters of all races under 50. And again, you to to win an election in Clare Valdez's case by 20 points, you know, in in that North Brooklyn western Queens commie corridor to win to defeat, you know, a 10-year incumbent in the 13th Congressional District, which has more renters than a um other district in America. you can't really build the the the the winning coalitions as they did if you're just again relying on like a very thin slice of you know college educated more white collar professionals things like that."
Political analyst Michael Lang presented data showing Democratic Socialists of America candidates are building multi-racial coalitions primarily divided by age rather than race. His analysis of recent New York City victories by DSA candidates Claire Valdez and Daria Chevier revealed they won voters of all races under 50 by landslide margins, contradicting narratives from both left and right that the coalition is either too white or too immigrant-heavy. The finding challenges establishment Democratic assumptions about the electoral limits of progressive candidates.

About this episode

Hosts Crystal Ball and Saagar Enjeti discuss recent Democratic Socialists of America electoral victories with political analyst Michael Lang, author of the Narrative Wars Substack. The conversation centers on DSA candidates' wins in Colorado and New York City, including political newcomer Malak Curos unseating a 30-year incumbent in Colorado and victories by Claire Valdez and Daria Chevier in New York. Lang presents detailed voting data that challenges competing narratives about the DSA coalition, revealing that age rather than race is the primary dividing line, with DSA candidates winning voters of all races under 50 by significant margins while also making inroads with older voters. The analysis contradicts both progressive critics who claim DSA is too white and conservative critics like Jesse Watters who characterize it as a "third world takeover." Lang attributes success to a decade of grassroots organizing in New York City, with the Valdez campaign alone knocking on over 300,000 doors. The discussion explores how figures like Zohran Mamdani have successfully transferred their political coalitions to other candidates, something Obama and Trump failed to accomplish. Ball suggests the decline of identity politics weaponization and electability narratives, which were used against Bernie Sanders, has opened space for broader coalition-building around universalist economic concerns like housing affordability and student debt. Lang argues establishment Democratic panic signals an acknowledgement they've lost the next generation of voters, who are asserting political power earlier than expected. The episode examines whether this New York and Denver model can scale nationally, noting the Democratic electorate is becoming younger, more diverse, more college-educated, and increasingly urban.

Key takeaways

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