Monday, April 20, 2026

The Time for Illusions Is Over: Henry Giroux on the Democratic Party

Scholar and cultural critic Henry Giroux penned the following words over seven months ago. Sadly, they remain as relevant and true today as they did then.

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The Democratic Party has forfeited every claim to moral and political credibility. It is not a bulwark against fascism but an accomplice to it, a party of cowardice and complicity that props up the most barbaric features of gangster capitalism-extending from staggering levels of inequality to its refusal to support national health care. Its leadership, craven, visionless, and drunk on Wall Street money, has become a machinery of war and despair. It is wedded to the military-industrial complex and normalizes through its silence a culture of war, misery, and cruelty. It sends billions in weapons to Benjamin Netanyahu, an indicted war criminal, fully aware those arms sustain a machinery of occupation and repression. With one act, fighting to cut off the flow of weapons, the Democrats could help end this slaughter. Instead, when Netanyahu recently visited the White House, they shook his bloodstained hand and smiled for the cameras, their shamelessness captured in a widely circulated, obscene photograph. This betrayal abroad mirrors the Party’s collapse at home. The Party’s cowardice is written into its very DNA.

It is a party of whiners, trapped in ideological smugness and a flaccid discourse of compromise. Given its political and ethical weakness, it is ironic that on occasion it drapes itself in the hollow language of “resisting Trump’s authoritarianism.” This becomes more obvious when it advocates, on occasion, working with the regime, even as it props up authoritarians abroad and tightens the screws of neoliberal cruelty at home. Moira Donegan writing in The Guardian is right in stating that the Democratic Party is the party of self-sabotage, that is, it has a vision of American politics in which (they] have no power to set the terms of the debate on their own.” Its neoliberal policies have hollowed out working-class communities, shredded social protections, remained largely moot in calling out Trump’s regime as a criminogenic organization, and left despair in their wake, conditions that became the breeding ground for Trump’s authoritarian ascent. They created the void that fascism fills, and now they tremble before the monster they helped unleash.

. . . [T]he Democratic leadership refuses to lift a finger for candidates who represent genuine hope. Their refusal to support Zohran Mamdani in New York is not an oversight but a betrayal. Schumer and Jeffries embody the Party’s moral bankruptcy: Schumer the coward, Jeffries the gutless tactician, both locked in servitude to corporate power, both content to preside over a politics of endless war, mass incarceration, obscene inequality, and the normalization of state terrorism. They are the pallbearers of democracy, not its defenders. Commenting on the fact that Jeffries and Schumer have so far refused to endorse Mamdani, journalist Mehdi Hasan wrote in a recent column for The Guardian, “If you want to understand why the Democrats are polling at their lowest point for more than three decades, look no further than these two uninspiring Democratic leaders in Congress.” Mehdi only gets it partly right: these two politicians embody not individual cowardice, but a party that supports genocide in Gaza, refuses to stand up to the military-industrial-academic complex, and could not care less about the future they are destroying for young people.

The American people deserve more than these moral zombies. What is needed is a new party, one unafraid to fight for radical democracy and the dignity of all. A party that calls for the end of staggering inequality, a universal wage, free health care, free quality education for all, housing for everyone, strict gun restrictions, the abolition of poverty, and the dismantling of the warfare state. A party that will slash the bloated defense budget and redirect those trillions into schools, hospitals, homes, and the expansion of social rights. A party that will name criminalized capitalism for what it is: a death-dealing order of greed, violence, corruption, and disposability.

The time for illusions is over. The Democratic Party cannot be reformed, nor can it be trusted to halt the march of authoritarianism. What is required is not the rehabilitation of a party of cowardice, but the creation of a new political formation, one that does not tremble before fascism but confronts it head-on. A movement that refuses to confuse capitalism with democracy, that rejects the barbarism of endless war and the plunder of Wall Street, that refuses to sacrifice children in Gaza or in America’s streets on the altar of profit and power. Such a movement must be rooted in the struggles of ordinary people, grounded in solidarity and sustained by collective courage.

The future belongs to those who can imagine and fight for a radically different order: a socialist democracy grounded in solidarity, justice, and care. It belongs to those who demand free health care and education, who insist on housing and dignity for all, who struggle for racial, gender, and economic equality, and who reject the culture of disposability that treats lives as expendable. It belongs to those willing to rise up, organize, and fight for a world where freedom, justice, and equality are not a privilege of the few, but the common inheritance of all.

Henry Giroux
Excerpted from “The Democratic Party:
Architects of Cowardice, Accomplices to Fascism

CounterPunch
September 8, 2025


See also the previous Wild Reed posts:
Authoritarianism With a Blue Sticker
David Norton: “The Democratic Party Serves Capital, Not You”
Mike Figueredo: “Elected Democrats Have No Real Interest in Doing What the Base Wants”
Tony Pentimalli on the Fallacy of the “Safe Political Center”
Genny Harrison on Brian Tyler Cohen’s Interview with Obama
Progressives and Obama
Jeff Cohen on How Obama’s “Corporate Liberalism” Led to the Rise of Trump
Progressive Perspectives on Kamala Harris’s Book, 107 Days
Adam Bates on the Team Blue / Kamala “I Told Ya So” Smugness Tour
The Lamentable Legacy of the Biden/Harris Administration
Progressive Perspectives on Where Democrats Went Wrong in 2024
Why the Democratic Party Is Not Going to Save Us From Fascism
David Sirota: Quote of the Day – January 26, 2021
Elise Labott on How Third Parties Can Revitalize Democracy
Butch Ware: “People Really Want New Options in Politics”
“The Moment Is Ripe”: Butch Ware on Building a “True Oppositional Alternative” to the Duopoly
“It Is Our Responsibility to Make a Third Party Viable”
Butch Ware on “Red & Blue vs Green Politics”
“Green Wave 2026 is Global”
Meet Some of the “People-Powered” Green Party Candidates for 2026
Introducing California’s Gubernatorial Candidate Butch Ware
Butch Ware on His Run for California Governor and the Wider Goal of Disrupting the Duopoly
Butch Ware and the Gatekeepers Within the Democratic Party
Butch Ware: “I’m Trying to Take Care of People”
Third Parties and the Historical Record
Butch Ware on Efforts by the Democratic Party to Block His Green Party Run for California Governor

Image: Marianique Santos.


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