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Where Have All the Democrats Gone?: The Soul of the Party in the Age of Extremes Hardcover – November 7, 2023
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A Wall Street Journal Best Political Book of 2023
A much-needed wake-up call for the Democrats, which reveals how the party has lost sight of its core principles and endangered its political future―from the authors of “one of the most influential political books of the 21st century” (The New York Times)
For decades, American politics has been plagued by a breakdown between the Democratic and Republican parties, in which victory has inevitably led to defeat and vice versa. Both parties have lost sight of the people at the center of the American electorate, leading to polarization and paralysis. In Where Have All the Democrats Gone?, John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira reveal the tectonic changes shaping the country’s current political landscape that both pundits and political scientists have missed.
The Democratic Party, once the preserve of small towns as well as big cities and of the industrial working class and the newly immigrated, has abandoned and even actively alienated many of these voters. In this clarion call and essential argument for common sense and common ground, Judis and Teixeira reveal the transformation of American politics and provide a razor-sharp critique of where the Democrats have gone awry and how they can avoid political disaster in the days ahead.
- Print length336 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHenry Holt and Co.
- Publication dateNovember 7, 2023
- Dimensions5.8 x 1.1 x 9.25 inches
- ISBN-101250877490
- ISBN-13978-1250877499
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Editorial Reviews
Review
A Wall Street Journal best political book of 2023
“John Judis and Ruy Teixeira are the two preeminent scholars of liberalism and the Democratic Party. Over the past several decades, they have chronicled the vicissitudes of the American left with unmatched skill and insight. Where Have All the Democrats Gone? captures the fragile state of the party at a critical moment and joins the ranks of Theodore White’s The Making of the American President 1960 and Richard Ben Cramer’s What It Takes. A deeply informed and beautifully written work of reportage and scholarship, this volume is brilliant, indispensable and simply the best analysis in decades of America’s urgent, fraught politics.”
―Thomas Edsall, columnist, The New York Times
"Where Have All the Democrats Gone? gives a pretty persuasive explanation―one that should be read as a warning."
―Pamela Paul, The New York Times
“If, like me, you are terrified by the prospect of a second Trump presidency, you need to ask yourself just how, despite seemingly favorable demographics, the Democratic Party became so vulnerable to populist attacks. In Where Have All the Democrats Gone?, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira’s brilliant and levelheaded intervention into the fraught debate around identity politics and polarization, two of our best political minds make a clear and persuasive case for how and why Democrats must win back the trust and partnership of the working class. It’s a What’s the Matter with Kansas? for the contemporary left and just in the nick of time.”
―Thomas Chatterton Williams, contributing writer, The Atlantic
“Over the last half century, Democrats went from being the unified party of working people to a fractured collection of interest groups. With an unparalleled understanding of political history and practice, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira tell us how and why identity politics trumped class, and what the Democratic Party must do to regain its strength―and its soul.”
―Rana Foroohar, columnist, Financial Times
“Twenty years ago, John Judis and Ruy Teixeira brought optimism to a gloomy Democratic Party by writing The Emerging Democratic Majority. Now they are back with a stern warning to the party they love: If you don’t want to return to minority status, stop ignoring the working-class voters who have always been the heart of the party.”
―Nicholas Lemann, staff writer, The New Yorker
"If there is one book all the senior members of President Joe Biden's reelection campaign should read it is John B. Judis' and Ruy Teixeira's brutal and brilliant Where Have All the Democrats Gone?... an excellent analysis of the changing shape of electoral politics."
―Michael Sean Winters, National Catholic Reporter
"A rigorous dissection of how and why the once formidable Democratic coalition has fallen apart. . . In a deft blend of the big picture and micro reporting, Judis and Teixeira explore the options for rebuilding the Democrats as a party for working people."
―Financial Times
"Judis and Teixeira deserve credit for taking a brave stance.... Democrats would be wise to consider this book carefully."
―Reihan Salam, National Review
"An important new book counsels a return to the New Deal philosophy of fighting for the common man, upholding equal opportunity instead of identity politics, and not sucking up to Wall Street and Silicon Valley."
―Kenneth S. Baer, Washington Monthly
“Teixeira and Judis are here to give some tough love to Democrats on what it takes to win in today’s tribalized landscape. The Trumpified Republican party poses an active threat to democracy, so Democrats―for now―are the last best hope for fixing our broken politics. But to do that, the authors argue, they’ll need to abandon their addiction to identity politics, and instead lean into pragmatic problem-solving. Prescient and timely, this is a must-read for anyone who is serious about building a durable pro-democracy majority.”
―Sarah Longwell, publisher, The Bulwark
“John Judis and Ruy Teixeira’s 2002 book, The Emerging Democratic Majority, induced a misplaced confidence in those influenced by a one-sentence summary of its contents. The detailed account provided in their new book, Where Have All the Democrats Gone?, shows how complacency about the inevitable victory that demographic change would deliver to a party at once committed to the preferred economic policy of Wall Street and Silicon Valley and to increasingly esoteric cultural fantasia (concerning race and gender) undid the ruling coalition that was theirs to lose in the early 21st century. This is a must-read for those seeking to understand the last two decades and what those decades portend for the future.”
―Wesley Yang, author of The Souls of Yellow Folk
"Revealing. . . . John B. Judis and Ruy Teixeira make an argument both sober and bracing that anyone who cares about the future course of American politics should take seriously."
―Michael Kazin, The Liberal Patriot
"Immensely valuable for any observer of American politics... As the United States veers towards what could be the most contentious election in the country’s history, these brilliant minds explain better than anyone else exactly why it is surely going to be incredibly close."
―Mercator
About the Author
John B. Judis serves as editor at large at Talking Points Memo. Previously, Judis worked as a senior writer at the National Journal and a senior editor at The New Republic. His books include The Emerging Democratic Majority, which he cowrote with Ruy Teixeira, as well as The Populist Explosion, The Folly of Empire, and more. Judis received his BA and MA degrees in philosophy from the University of California, Berkeley.
Product details
- Publisher : Henry Holt and Co. (November 7, 2023)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 336 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250877490
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250877499
- Item Weight : 13.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.8 x 1.1 x 9.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #452,392 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #316 in Political Parties (Books)
- #625 in Democracy (Books)
- #1,137 in Political Conservatism & Liberalism
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors

Ruy Teixeira is a Senior Fellow at both The Century Foundation and American Progress. He is also co-director of the States of Change: Demographics and Democracy project, a collaboration that brings together the Center for American Progress, the Bipartisan Policy Center, and demographer William Frey of the Brookings Institution.
His most recent book is The Optimistic Leftist: Why the 21st Century Will Be Better Than You Think. His other books include The Emerging Democratic Majority; America’s Forgotten Majority: Why the White Working Class Still Matters; The Disappearing American Voter; and Red, Blue and Purple America: The Future of Election Demographics.
Teixeira’s book The Emerging Democratic Majority, written with John Judis in 2002, was the most widely discussed political book of that year and generated praise across the political spectrum, from George Will on the right to E.J. Dionne on the left. It was selected as one of the best books of the year by The Economist.

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John B. Judis serves as editor at large at Talking Points Memo. Previously, Judis worked as a senior writer at the National Journal and for many years as a senior editor at The New Republic. His books include The Politics of Our Time, The Populist Explosion, Genesis: Truman, American Jews, and the Origins of the Arab-Israeli Conflict, The Folly of Empire, The Paradox of American Democracy, and William F. Buckley Jr: Patron Saint of the Conservatives. . Judis received his BA and MA degrees in philosophy from the University of California, Berkeley.
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Customers find the book well-written, excellent, and compelling. They say it's a valuable study that helps clarify the reasons for the current political situation. Readers also say the book provides a comprehensive account of the party's focus.
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Customers find the book well-written, compelling, and easy to read. They say it's important for all Democrats.
"...are more interested in diverse views and new information, this is a fine read." Read more
"...It’s a quick and easy read and will make you think hard about your own political stances if you approach it with an open mind." Read more
"Compelling and important reading for all Democrats..." Read more
"Excellent book about our current political situation..." Read more
Customers find the book's pacing good. They say it's helpful in clarifying some of the reasons why this may be. Readers also mention it'll be a good introduction for people who want to understand the soul.
"...I found this book very helpful in clarifying some of the reasons why this may be happening and what Democrats might do to reverse this trend. ...." Read more
"...It presents a comprehensive account - supported by polls - of how the party's focus shifted from the blue-collar to the elite and culturally..." Read more
"...The book mostly covers these issues with lots of polling data. A valuable study to help understand what has happened." Read more
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This book for me provided an excellent and coherent history of the shifts and changes in the Democratic party since the New Deal and how and why the party has altered its policies over time. The authors also provided a detailed account of the current areas in Democratic policy that may be losers for us going forward (especially with working class voters) and how these issues could be more effectively addressed so that the Democratic Party could be the “big tent” that it has always aspired to be.
From 1932 to 1980 we saw the ascendancy of the New Deal programs championed by the Democratic Party. These policies were fueled by the rise in the strength of the union movement during this period. But starting in the 60’s and 70’s we start to see the seeds of dissolution of the power of unions from a height of 33% of workers in the 50’s to 12% in 1987. This coupled with the rise of lobbying in DC and the rising power of the business class in the 70’s that compounded under Reagan as unions grew weaker, created a profound pressure in the Democratic party to become more “big business friendly.”
Under Clinton this took off with his pro Wall Street policies such as entering into the WTO, championing NAFTA, the repeal of Glass Steagall and then cutting the social safety net with the elimination of welfare “as we know it.” During this time working class voters who had traditionally been key supports of New Deal Democrats starting leaving the party while professionals who were growing in number as key workers in the post industrial economy increasingly became Democrats. Policies like NAFTA and bringing China into the neoliberal order may have served professionals who could more readily employ immigrants as nannies and gardeners and enjoy cheaper consumer goods but as more Mexican immigrants flooded into the US (because NAFTA had wiped out their small farms), these workers competed with some of our working class voters – esp. those who became displaced in meatpacking construction and manufacturing.
These forces also accelerated the massive drain of manufacturing jobs out of the US to seek cheaper labor abroad in order to improve multinational corporate profits. The book cites statistics that NAFTA alone, which Clinton promised would increase US jobs, actually lost 2.5 million US workers their jobs by 2010. With this more working people left the Democratic party. This drain continued under Obama and Clinton with no effort made on the Democratic party or candidates’ part to address some of working people’s very real economic concerns. On the other hand, Trump campaigned on bringing US manufacturing jobs back, placing tariffs on Chinese goods to protect US businesses and renegotiating NAFTA to be more favorable to workers in addition to taking tough stands on immigration. All of these policies tended to be viewed positively by many working class people esp. in the deindustrialized areas of our country. The Democrats’ silence on addressing these issues cost them dearly in 2016 as they lost MI, WI and PA as well as OH and IA – all states Obama had formally won.
While Trump was great at campaigning he was not as great at leading though he did implement some tariffs and renegotiated NAFTA but his erratic leadership on COVID left him vulnerable. So Biden, focusing largely on the excesses and deficiencies of Trump won the 2020 election. Interestingly the book reports that Biden won working class voters in MI, PA and WI by slim margins over Trump but it was these margins that were impactful in Biden’s ultimate election win.
In his presidency, Biden to his credit has implemented policies that are not tone deaf to working people but have tried to address front and center some of the real economic issues of working people particularly in deindustrialized regions with the Infrastructure, CHIPS and Inflation Reduction Acts. This has been a real strength of his presidency.
On the other hand, there are areas of significant weakness in current Democratic policy that could cost us in the upcoming election. These include the Democratic tendency to endorse what the authors call “racial radicalism.” From championing the 1619 project and CRT to anti-racism to cancel culture, the party at large has endorsed policies viewed as too extreme, controversial - and even unfair - by the general public, esp. among working class voters.
Another area of weakness is immigration. The Democratic party has mistakenly thought that being pro immigration would net them Hispanic votes. However this has not proven to be the case. Quite the contrary, the Democratic party experienced a significant net decline in support in 2020 in Hispanic working class votes as well as a significant decline in Asian working class votes. This more open policy in immigration may be costing the Democrats dearly.
A third area that is a touchstone for potential Democratic losses is taking too extreme a position on climate change – they call it Climate Radicalism. While climate change is real and most today acknowledge this – they provide evidence that we need continued back up of fossil fuels – esp cleaner fuels like natural gas – to prop up any transition to renewables. For example the authors point out that with the negotiations with Manchin around the Inflation Reduction Act there was a proposal to expedite the permitting process of both renewable and fossil fuel projects. The Democrats nixed this because it supports fossil fuel projects in spite of the fact it that it means that fewer renewable projects will be able to be brought on line expeditiously. The authors also point out that working class folks in more industrialized areas tend to be more dependent on fossil fuels because of reliance on heavy industry. Finally they point out that jobs that are supposed to be so plentiful with the Green New Deal aren’t turning out to be the case. Generally these renewable projects involve construction up front and then little ongoing maintenance. They write: “A NYT’s investigation of jobs in the solar and wind sectors described them as looking less like mid century blue collar jobs that lifted workers into the middle class and more like jobs “in an Amazon warehouse or fleet of Uber drivers: grueling work schedules, few unions, middling wages and limited benefits.” The renewable jobs are not likely to replace the higher paying jobs that have been more plentiful in the fossil fuel industry as the latter winds down.
While the authors are critical of the Democratic party in terms of these issues, they also feel that the hope for the most future economic prosperity and benefit for working class voters lies with the Democratic Party - more so than the GOP. At the end of the book they cite a poll that was taken in 2022 with some mainstream views that might be grist for future Democratic Party policy.
Results in May 22 of a national polling group: Public Policy Polling
America is not perfect but it is good to be patriotic and proud of our country. Supported 71% by Dems/91% by Reps
Discrimination and racism are bad but they are not the cause of all of the disparities in American Society. Supported 62% by Dems/91% by Reps
Equality of opportunity is a fundamental American principle; equality of outcome is not. Supported 66% by Dems, 73% by Reps.
No one is completely without bias but calling all white people racists who benefit from white privilege and categorizing America as a white supremacist society is not right or fair Supported by 55% Dems, 87% by Reps.
America benefits from the presence of immigrants and no immigrant – even if illegal – should be mistreated. But border security is still important as is an enforceable system that fairly decides who can enter the country. Supported 74% by Dems, 89% by Reps.
Police misconduct and brutality against people of any race is wrong, and we need to reform police conduct and recruitment. More and better policing is needed for public safety and that cannot be provided by defunding the police. Supported 69% by Dems, 91% by Reps.
There are underlying differences between men and women, but discrimination on the basis of gender is wrong. Supported 90% by Dems, 91% by Reps.
There are basically two genders, but people who want to live as a gender different from their biological sex should have the right and not be discriminated against. However there are issues around child consent to transitioning and participation in women’s sports that are complicated and not settled. Supported 65% by Dems, 76% by Reps.
Racial achievement gaps are bad and we should seek to close them. However they are not due just to racism, and standards of high achievement should be maintained for people of all races. Supported 64% by Dems, 91% by Reps.
Language policing has gone too far. By and large people should be able to express their views without fear of sanction by employer, school, institution or government. Good faith should be assumed, not bad faith. Supported 61% by Dems, 91% by Reps.
If you are concerned about the future of our country and about Democrats winning this upcoming election, I highly recommend the reading of this book.
However, I dropped one star for this book because the authors did not offer thorough remedies for the dire political situation in the last chapter. My main disappointment is that suggestions such as open primary or ranked-choice voting should have been mentioned even though they may disagree. Such reforms have shown to be successful in scaling back extremities in Alaska and Maine. That said, more effort is needed to see fundamental changes. For people who want to know more about ranked-choice voting, I suggest "The Politics Industry" by Katherine M. Gehl and Michael E. Porter.
The last 100 pages, Part II, "Cultural Radicalism," offer me into new material, about the organizations and personalities involved in policies about race, immigration, gender/sexual orientation, and climate change. My how things have changed since I left the chattering classes (universities) decades ago for careers in business and later government. I now know, for example, about Project 1619: its advocates and critics. and how major universities, media, and agencies were captured by "1619." News to me, though I had suspicions of yet another wave of political correctness by what I saw and heard in the media.
If you are fiercely partisan this is not the book for you. If you are more interested in diverse views and new information, this is a fine read.







