David Weigel/XCHARLESTON, S.C. — Don’t be led around by “the groups.” Don’t worry about what people say on X or Bluesky. And please, please, please: Don’t be boring. On Sunday and Monday, the centrist Democratic think tank Third Way gathered allies, reporters, and potential 2028 campaign staff for “Winning the Middle,” an effort to organize their faction of the party and avoid the leftward march they blame for Donald Trump’s comeback. Joe Biden had left the city 24 hours earlier, after a celebration of the 2020 primary win that sent him to the White House. That win, said Third Way’s leaders, was undone by Biden’s decision to bring Bernie Sanders’ allies into the party’s platform and transition committees. “Democrats’ post-Obama drift left must be reversed,” said Third Way president Jonathan Cowan at the start of the conference. Biden and the liberals of his era had not effectively resisted ideas like “defund the police, a Green New Deal that would ban fossil fuels by 2030, open borders, modern monetary theory that says deficits or inflation are good, a $44 trillion government takeover of health care, land acknowledgements, identity politics, cancel culture and more.” Conference attendees got new polling on their voters’ media preferences (YouTube, not Bluesky), advice from pragmatic liberals who’d battled the left (San Francisco District Attorney Brooke Rollins), and face time with the South Carolina Democrats who helped Biden win in 2020. Third Way’s Jim Kessler described the candidate key voters wanted: A “crusading reformer” who would fight Trump, while disagreeing enough with leftists that moderates knew they could trust him. |