Socialism is only a symptom. Republicans can’t risk ignoring the real problem

Socialism is only a symptom. Republicans can’t risk ignoring the real problem

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The left isn’t embracing socialism. It’s rejecting the status quo.

The political world woke up after Tuesday’s election asking the same question: Is the Democratic Party lurching toward socialism?

Maybe.

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But that’s not the question that matters.

Congressional candidate Claire Valdez, Congressional candidate Brad Lander, Mayor Zohran Mamdani, and Congressional candidate Darializa Avila Chevalier raise their hands during a Get Out the Vote (GOTV) rally at King’s Theater on June 18, 2026, in New York City. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

The question that matters is this: Why are more voters willing to give socialism a look in the first place?

Because if Republicans answer that question incorrectly, they risk making precisely the same mistake Democrats made in 2016.

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The rise of President Donald Trump bewildered much of the political establishment. Too many observers looked at his supporters and saw only the man. They missed the message.

What many Trump voters were saying was simple: The system isn’t working for me anymore.

Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump speaks to supporters at a campaign rally Saturday, Nov. 28, 2015 at Robarts Arena in Sarasota, Fla. Speaking before thousands who jammed into the arena, Trump said he's "killing everybody" in polls nationally and in early voting states. (AP Photo/Steve Nesius)

Then-presidential candidate Donald Trump at a campaign rally Saturday, Nov. 28, 2015, in Sarasota, Fla. (AP)

They felt ignored by political leaders, looked down upon by cultural elites and abandoned by institutions they no longer trusted. They believed that the people in charge either couldn’t or wouldn’t fix what was broken.

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Trump didn’t create that frustration. He harnessed it.

Today, a remarkably similar frustration is coursing through younger and more progressive voters, even if it is leading them to very different political conclusions.

Listen to the language of the left’s ascendant voices.

New York Democrat Mayor Zohran Mamdani has made affordability the centerpiece of his politics. “My focus is on the cost-of-living crisis,” he said during his campaign. Elsewhere, he has argued that he is running to “lower the cost of living for working-class New Yorkers.”

The rise of President Donald Trump bewildered much of the political establishment. Too many observers looked at his supporters and saw only the man. They missed the message.

Notice what is absent from those appeals. There is little talk of Marx. Little discussion of economic theory. Instead, there is a relentless focus on everyday struggle: rent, groceries, childcare, transportation, and the increasingly widespread feeling that a middle-class life is slipping out of reach.

Claire Valdez, one of the Democratic Socialists backed by Mamdani who prevailed Tuesday, framed her campaign in similarly populist terms. “We are more powerful than the billionaires and bosses,” she told supporters in the closing days of the race.

Darializa Avila Chevalier spoke in much the same language, arguing that too many working people feel trapped in an economy that benefits those at the top while everyone else falls further behind. Across these campaigns, the message was remarkably consistent: ordinary people believe the system is no longer delivering for them.

For many younger voters, this isn’t ideology. It’s biography.

They look at homeownership and see fantasy. They look at college debt and see decades of payments. They look at healthcare costs, rent and everyday expenses and wonder whether they will ever enjoy the economic security their parents took for granted.

And increasingly, they have lost faith that the institutions that shaped previous generations can solve these problems.

Democratic candidate Brad Lander speaking on stage at an election rally in Brooklyn

Democratic congressional candidate Brad Lander speaks at an election eve rally in the East Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York, on June 22, 2026. (Michael M. Santiago/Getty Images)

That loss of faith matters.

Because when people conclude that the existing system no longer works, they go searching for alternatives.

Sometimes those alternatives emerge on the right. Sometimes they emerge on the left. But the emotional fuel is often strikingly similar: anger, frustration, disillusionment and a deep sense that the promise of America is slipping away.

This is where Republicans should proceed carefully.

If socialism worries you, condemning the people drawn to it is unlikely to change their minds.

Democrats spent years dismissing Trump supporters as misguided, irrational or morally suspect. In doing so, they often ignored the underlying frustrations that made Trump’s message resonate in the first place.

Sen. Bernie Sanders and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez

U.S. Sen Bernie Sanders, I-VT., and Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, D-NY, hold a press conference to announce the Artificial Intelligence Data Center Moratorium Act at the US Capitol on March 25, 2026, in Washington, D.C.  (Tasos Katopodis/Getty Images)

Conservatives should avoid repeating that mistake.

People rarely embrace political movements because they have spent countless hours studying ideology. More often, they embrace movements because those movements speak to their fears, validate their frustrations, and offer hope that change is possible.

Socialism is not the disease. It is a symptom.

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The deeper problem is the growing belief, shared by Americans on both the left and the right, that the current system no longer delivers a fair shot, a secure future, or a reason to trust the institutions that govern our lives.

Americans are angry.

Because when people conclude that the existing system no longer works, they go searching for alternatives.

Some are expressing that anger through populism on the right. Others are expressing it through democratic socialism on the left.

The labels are different.

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The dissatisfaction is not.

And any political movement that ignores that reality does so at its own peril.

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