The Divided States of America. That’s who we are now.
It’s not who we needed to be and it’s the greatest tragedy of our lifetimes that we are, but it’s an unpleasant reality that we need to be clear-headed about in these moments so that we can understand the path forward.
Throughout the postmortem of the Harris-Walz campaign, I’ve heard some familiar critiques of the Democratic Presidential ticket from many media members, left-leaning think pieces, and other Blue voters:
”They were out of touch with working Americans.”
”They didn’t acknowledge people’s financial pain.”
”They came across as elitist and out-of-touch.”
Nonsense.
That’s just simply not reality.
The entire Harris-Walz platform was erected on attention to and care for working people:
tax cuts for the middle class.
lower prescription drug costs.
financial help for first-time home buyers.
incentives for small business startups.
support for adult caregivers of elderly parents.
affordable healthcare.
lower grocery prices.
student loan debt relief.
Their platform, their proposed policies, and the presentation of those policies were all pitch-perfect. They did not err on those levels, regardless of the narratives floated by Monday morning quarterbacking pundits and politicians. The Dems offered a clear and easily understandable alternative to what was being presented across the aisle.
No, the one mistake Kamala Harris and Tim Walz did make, was that they underestimated the hearts of tens of millions of America’s people.
They expected them to respond en masse to an open-hearted campaign of hope, positivity, shared opportunity, and mutual respect.
They actually had the stupefying naivety to believe that a joyful movement of interdependent fortunes and love for one another would move the majority of this nation.
They spent three months passionately putting their chips down on the high road and the better angels, imagining that an optimistic “there is no them” message would bring the healing this nation has desperately needed since November of 2016.
Kamala Harris and Tim Walz confidently bet the house on unity—and they lost.
They lost, because 77 million Americans chose division, they ratified separation, they amen-ed exclusion; because despite their professions of a love your neighbor faith and their America First nationalistic fervor, they chose wars and walls and tribalism.
For the entire presidential campaign, while Kamala Harris unapologetically sang the hopeful refrain in, “the belief that we have so much more in common than that which separates us", Donald Trump drew the sharp, jagged battle lines of us and them:
the immigrants are poisoning this country.
public school teachers are polluting young people’s minds.
transgender people are peddling perversion.
the media is the enemy of this nation.
blue voters are dangerous and vile people.
He turned foreigners into monsters, LGBTQ people into pedophiles; he fashioned ordinary human beings into a lawless, blood-thirsty legion of enemies and adversaries for uninformed voters to be hysterically terrified by, so that they would look at their disparate neighbors, not with compassion but contempt.
Trump’s campaign offered zero policies, no tangible ideas, no unifying aspirations, no galvanizing agenda.
He simply dispensed hatred and fear, paraded lazy stereotypes and tired caricatures— and that proved to be a winning strategy. That’s why these days are as heartbreaking for the rest of us as they are: like the Kamala Harris and Tim Walz, and like the Democratic Party, we realize unity isn’t attractive anymore.
And in the wake of an election where 77 million of our fellow Americans posture and pump their chests and fly strident middle fingers to the rest of us as if they’ve defeated us—we just feel stupid.
We feel like idiots for believing that the majority was too decent to buy Donald Trump’s cheap weaponizing of difference, his desperate vilifying of the already-marginalized, his transparent middle school scare tactics.
We watched Kamala Harris and Tim Walz articulately deliver a message of empathy and collaboration; something appealing to the best of America’s ideals, and regardless of the ways we want to analyze or spin or parse it out, that message failed. They was a shock that we will never fully recover from.
And so, yes, this nation is now comprised of the us and the them in stark, unmistakable clarity and that’s simply the tragic and sober truth.
And that’s not because we desired it at all, it’s because 77 million Americans made it absolutely clear: that’s exactly what they want and that’s what they voted for.
And so we are going to have to decide where we go from here.
I live in a very red rural area. I keep reading that I should go out and participate in my community to 'help with healing' after this disastrous election.
To be honest, I don't want to. I don't want to be a part of this hateful population who might be nice to your face but who voted for the coming awfulness and are proud of themselves.
I do belong to my local Democratic Party and we worked so hard to offer hope and positivity, as did Vice President Harris and Governor Tim Walz. I think they did a fantastic job in the short time they were given. We ourselves were so optimistic, only to be saddened by the pervasiveness of hate and revenge indicated by the results of the election.
I no longer look forward to seeing people that I had considered to be friends who I know voted for this division. I could sort of understand being naive enough to vote for 45 the first time, but now worry that if someone voted for 47, that person is just like him. And that makes me sick.
I'm looking for a way out of this feeling of dread and isolation, and I'm not finding it.
I remember think on the day after Election Day, 2016 that America was as racist as I thought it might be. In 2024, I decided that not only are lots of Americans racist, they are ignorant and stupid. Yes, I said stupid. They check out a set of tires more seriously than candidates for office. They will get the government they deserve, but the rest of us will be brought along for the horrible ride. No, I am not ready to make nice with some people I know who voted for 45. They showed themselves to be nasty and racist way before 2024. They just followed their actual nature in this election. They also think they are Christians.