

How Democrats Ended Up On The Losing Side Of The Class Divide
4 snips May 27, 2025
Joan C. Williams, a distinguished law professor and author of 'Outclassed', dives into the widening chasm between Democrats and the working class. She explores how class dynamics complicate political affiliations, revealing that educational achievement oversimplifies real issues. The conversation tackles why many non-college-educated voters lean Republican and critiques Democratic messaging that fails to resonate with middle-status voters. Williams emphasizes the necessity for Democrats to refine their economic messages and reconnect emotionally with the struggles of the working class.
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Class vs. Education Divide
- Class shapes political values and voting more than just education level. 63% of Americans lack a college degree, so Democrats' advantage among college graduates is a losing strategy.
- The real divide is between the top 20% (elite) and the middle 50% (working or middle class) on stable jobs and income, not between elites and the poor.
Precarity Fuels Far-Right Support
- Precarity, not poverty, drives far-right support among middle status voters in routine, fragile jobs.
- Neoliberal policies corroded stable middle-class jobs, causing income stagnation despite rising productivity.
Middle Class Values Hard Work
- The middle class values hard work and stability over redistributive policies favored by elites.
- Hard work worship and dignity from labor define the missing middle's political priorities more than economic redistribution.