Democrats: A Party Propped Up by Policies the Public Doesn’t Want

democrat-20percent

A recent survey of top issues affecting America paints a picture Democrats would rather voters not examine too closely. Strip away taxpayer subsidies, aggressive election rule changes, and the mass importation of foreign labor, and the modern Democrat Party shrinks dramatically. Without those pillars, it’s arguably a 20% party, loud, institutional, and media-amplified, but fundamentally disconnected from the priorities of most Americans.

That’s not hyperbole. It’s what emerges when you compare what Congress is actually debating with what voters consistently rank as their top concerns.

Subsidies as a Substitute for Popularity

Democrats have become the party of permanent subsidy. Student loan bailouts, green energy handouts, EV tax credits for households already well above the median income, corporate incentives dressed up as “climate policy”—all of it requires constant infusions of taxpayer money to sustain constituencies that wouldn’t exist otherwise.

Polling shows Americans are far more concerned about inflation, housing costs, healthcare affordability, and wages. Yet Congress spends its time arguing over which favored industries deserve the next round of federal support. These policies don’t win hearts organically; they buy loyalty with borrowed money.

Election Rules Over Election Confidence

Another disconnect lies in election policy. While voters across the political spectrum repeatedly say they want elections that are transparent, secure, and trusted, Democrats fixate on opposing voter ID, expanding ballot harvesting, and federalizing election standards.

Whether one calls it “election fraud” or “election integrity disputes,” the reality is that public confidence matters. Instead of addressing that concern head-on, Democrats often dismiss it outright—then act shocked when large portions of the electorate stop trusting the process. You don’t strengthen democracy by ignoring the doubts of half the country.

Immigration: Ideology Versus Reality

Nowhere is the gap between elite priorities and public opinion wider than immigration. Americans consistently support legal immigration paired with border enforcement. What they’re getting instead is mass illegal entry, overwhelmed cities, strained schools, and social services stretched to the breaking point.

Democrats talk about compassion while quietly relying on imported labor to pad population numbers, prop up congressional seats, and reshape future electorates. Sanctuary policies poll terribly, yet remain non-negotiable within the party. When mayors of deep-blue cities start begging for relief, the contradiction becomes impossible to ignore.

Congress Debates, America Suffers

While Americans worry about crime, fentanyl deaths, and economic survival, Congress debates pronouns, climate mandates, and ever-larger spending bills. The mismatch isn’t accidental—it’s existential. If Democrats governed according to the majority will, many of their signature policies would collapse.

That’s why they fight so hard to remain relevant. Their party’s current structure doesn’t survive without subsidies, procedural advantages, and demographic engineering.

Bottom Line

This isn’t about partisanship—it’s about political reality. When a party depends on taxpayer funding, institutional leverage, and unpopular policies to maintain power, it’s not leading. It’s clinging. And the more Americans notice the gap between what they want and what Washington delivers, the harder it becomes to maintain that grip.

We are being screwed by the minority.

— Steve

Thank you for visiting with us today. — Steve 

 

“The object in life is not to be on the side of the majority, but to escape finding oneself in the ranks of the insane.” — Marcus Aurelius

“Nullius in verba”– take nobody’s word for it!
“Acta non verba” — actions not words

A smiling man wearing sunglasses, a cap, and casual outdoor clothing outdoors in front of trees, representing citizen journalism and free speech advocacy.

About Me

I have over 40 years of experience in management consulting, spanning finance, technology, media, education, and political data processing. 

From sole proprietorships to Fortune 500 companies, I have turned around companies and managed their decline. All of which gives me a unique perspective on screwing and getting screwed.

Feel free to e-mail me at steve@onecitizenspeaking.com

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