MSNBC host and former congressman Joe Scarborough admitted Tuesday that Democrats have played a major role in shaping their public image as “elitist,” reinforcing the sentiment that the party is increasingly out of touch with working-class Americans.
Speaking with Semafor political reporter David Weigel, Scarborough reflected on decades of Democratic Party branding, saying the party had “painted themselves into the corner of being elitists” over the last 30 to 40 years. His comments come amid plunging Democratic approval ratings, with a March CNN poll showing only 29% favorability for the party overall, and an April 27 poll revealing that just 27% of voters approve of congressional Democratic leadership.
“The greatest irony of all,” Scarborough said, “is you’ve got all these Ivy League billionaires who Americans believe understand how they live more than Democrats.”
He emphasized that the disconnection is not just about policy but about personality and perception. Scarborough recounted a 2016 focus group in which a blue-collar woman explained her support for Donald Trump by saying, “Because he’s one of us.”
Despite his wealth and background, Trump has consistently outperformed Democrats in appealing to working-class voters, especially among white and Latino laborers. In 2024, internal surveys of the International Brotherhood of Teamsters showed Trump with strong support among rank-and-file union members—so much so that the union opted not to endorse a presidential candidate for the first time in decades, a sign of the deep political fracture within traditional Democratic strongholds.
While Democratic figures like Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez have tried to reclaim economic populism through an ongoing “anti-oligarchy” tour—taking direct aim at President Trump and high-profile billionaires like Elon Musk—critics argue that the effort still comes off as tone-deaf or overly academic to everyday voters.
The Democratic Party’s struggle with populist messaging is nothing new, but Scarborough’s remarks represent a growing recognition from within left-leaning media circles that cultural optics—not just legislative agendas—may be driving the party’s slide in favorability. With the 2026 midterms looming, Democrats will face increasing pressure to redefine their image and reconnect with the working class they once called their base.
This disconnect likely stems in part from the Democratic Party’s increasing alignment with academic and cultural elites on issues that resonate more in university settings than on factory floors. Topics like “gender diversity” and the promotion of transgender ideology—while passionately supported by activists and progressive institutions—are detached from the beliefs, priorities and everyday concerns of the working class.
These issues, largely incubated in elite academic circles, have come to dominate Democratic messaging at the expense of bread-and-butter priorities like jobs, cost of living, and crime. For many middle- and working-class Americans, the party’s focus on identity-based politics feels more like a lecture than a lifeline—reinforcing the perception that Democrats are more attuned to campus culture than kitchen-table issues.
Adding to the irony of Scarborough’s recent acknowledgment is his own on-air moment that unintentionally underscored the very elitism he now critiques. In a segment that aired in early November, Scarborough was visibly stunned to learn the price of butter—an everyday grocery item familiar to most Americans but apparently unknown to the MSNBC host. The moment quickly went viral, serving as a symbol of the disconnect between media elites and the economic realities of ordinary voters. This came after months—if not years—of Scarborough devoting much of his airtime to hyperbolic denunciations of Donald Trump, frequently invoking historical comparisons to dictators like Hitler and deploying common progressive rhetorical tactics to vilify Trump supporters. That pivot, from alarmist condemnation to self-reflection on Democrats’ elitist image, highlights the internal reckoning now facing the party’s institutional voices.
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