DNC will not release its report on what went wrong for Democrats in 2024
The Democratic National Committee withheld its 2024 election review to prevent internal conflict, despite recent wins signaling a possible recovery, DNC Chair Ken Martin said.
- The Democratic National Committee decided not to publish its much-anticipated internal review of the 2024 election loss, arguing that releasing it could deepen internal divisions rather than strengthen party unity.
- DNC Chair Ken Martin said the party is already applying lessons learned and emphasized recent electoral successes, claiming Democrats are regaining momentum through off-year and special election wins.
- While Democrats have performed well in recent gubernatorial and special elections, significant ideological, generational, and strategic disagreements continue within the party.
- Internal findings show the DNC autopsy report found underinvestment in digital tools, digital ads missed young voters, and Republicans mobilized through right-wing podcasters and influencers, while Future Forward, super PAC and its dark‑money affiliate raised over $600 million in 2024.
- Party officials involved in the review concluded that publicly revisiting the election defeat would be counterproductive, preferring to focus on forward-looking reforms and upcoming contests instead.
79 Articles
79 Articles
Democrats keep 2024 election review under wraps, saying a public rehash won't help them win in 2026
Democrats won't issue a postelection report on their 2024 shellacking after all. The Democratic National Committee head has decided not to publish a formal assessment of the party’s defeat that returned Donald Trump to power and gave Republicans complete control in Washington.
DNC won’t release 2024 election losses analysis
The Democratic National Committee (DNC) has decided against releasing its postmortem of the party’s 2024 losses it looks to build on 2025 momentum and take back power in Congress during next year’s midterms. “Here’s our North Star: does this help us win?” DNC Chair Ken Martin said in a statement shared with The Hill on…
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