How a Broken Media Ecosystem Enables Trump and the GOP
Bad things happen when it's impossible to get good information
Last week, the GOP Congress passed the least popular piece of major legislation since the advent of modern polling nearly a century ago.
Their own voters hate this bill. Even large swaths of Republicans oppose cuts to Medicaid and are ambivalent at best about the additional tax cuts for the rich. No one campaigned on this agenda. In fact, many Republicans explicitly campaigned against it.
Members of Congress are among the most nakedly self-interested individuals on the planet. This is particularly true of Republicans in the Trump era, who believe in maintaining power at all costs. Yet by any standard definition, they just passed a bill that everyone believes puts that power at great risk.
Even more than Congressional Republicans, Trump likes power and hates losing. He also knows that losing the majority means Democrats will have the power to investigate the vast amount of corruption in his administration.
So once again, why would these people—who love power—pass a bill that vastly increases their chances of losing it?
The answer is simple, and the same one that explains how we ended up electing a convicted criminal who sparked a violent insurrection and whose knowledge of how government works would be insufficient to pass the citizenship test:
Our media ecosystem is fundamentally broken. It has become nearly impossible for all but the most engaged news consumers to follow what is happening in politics. The biggest chasm in politics is no longer between the Right and the Left—it’s between those who follow the news religiously and those who passively or actively avoid politics. Democrats do quite well with the former and struggle mightily with the latter.
Trump benefits from a media environment powered by algorithms—where facts are fluid, context is impossible, anyone can be an “expert,” and the least credible voices are elevated above everyone else.
In 2024, according to polling from Data for Progress, Trump won the election because he did incredibly well with the voters who consume the least news.
That dynamic persists to this day and helps explain why the GOP felt comfortable passing the most unpopular bill in recent memory less than 18 months before a critical election. Understanding this dynamic will be critical to winning elections in the Trump era.
1. Understanding the Real Problem
Many liberal activists, particularly those who are very online, are convinced that if MAGA voters were just made aware of some of Trump’s misdeeds, they would take off their Gulf of America hats, start watching MSNBC, and become Democrats in good standing.
If only life were so simple.
Polarization and partisanship are powerful drugs. Many people’s political identity is their primary identity, so abandoning their party or politician of choice is a massive step. It means leaving their community—and, in many cases, their family and friends—behind.
There’s also more than a bit of elitism in suggesting that any voter bloc is simply too ignorant to know what’s good for them.
But Trump’s base is not our target audience. The 2024 election was decided by two groups: people who voted for Biden in 2020 and Trump in 2024, and first-time voters—groups Democrats lost in 2024 for the first time in a very long time.
This is the persuadable universe. And they happen to be people who engage with the news much less than people like us (I’m assuming that if you are reading this Substack, you are an absolutely voracious consumer of political news).
Navigator Research tracks the media consumption habits of its poll respondents and has done a very helpful analysis that shows how stark the divide is.
The whole graph is fascinating, but I would draw your attention to three specific findings:
A majority of Independents are passive news consumers.
49% of those who only vote in presidential elections are passive news consumers, compared to only 38% of midterm voters.
Two-thirds of people who say politics is important to their identity are active news consumers, compared to only 37% of those who say politics is not important to their identity.
2. How Passive News Consumers Get Their Information
The people we need to reach to win back the House and Senate are the 38% of midterm voters who don’t actively seek out the news. These folks have very different media diets than you and I. Social media is where most of them get their news.
Only 17% consider CNN to be a major source of news. Only 8% say that about national newspapers. I love complaining about the New York Times’s headlines as much as the next person, but this data makes clear that the voters we need to persuade are paying no attention to the Times. The big battles over their headlines and story choices are mostly an insular conversation among people whose vote was never in doubt.
3. How It Affects the Battle Over the Big Ugly Bill
During the process of passing the Big Ugly Bill—that kicks people off their health care and food assistance to pay for tax cuts that mainly benefit the ultra-wealthy and large corporations—Republicans were confident the worst aspects of the bill would never reach the voters who will decide the midterms.
An analysis from Priorities USA, a Democratic super PAC, found that the Republican plan was working. According to their research conducted right before the bill passed:
Nearly half (48%) of Americans haven’t heard anything about the ‘Big, Beautiful Bill.’ Even among the 52% who report hearing anything, a significant number—40%—only mention generalities or its status in Congress. Nearly two dozen policy impacts of the bill are raised by the rest of the survey respondents. These range from perceived positive economic benefits, like tax cuts, to negative impacts on government programs like SNAP and Social Security. More respondents have heard specifically about cuts to Medicaid, Medicare, and health care generally than any other aspect of the legislation. And yet, only 8% of all Americans name Medicaid cuts as a detail of the bill they have heard about.
This is a massive problem because the Medicaid cuts are by far the least popular part of a very unpopular bill. Even Republican voters do not want Medicaid cuts. Democrats have a tree-falling-in-the-woods problem: If Republicans cut Medicaid and no one knows about it, is it really a political problem?
4. Where We Go From Here
Here’s the simplest way to understand the problem: our current media ecosystem makes it very hard to get credible information—and the less credible the information voters have, the more likely they are to support Trump and the Republicans.
Therefore, our challenge is to get our message in front of voters who don’t actively seek out the news. That means changing our strategy in three fundamental ways:
Become Less Obsessed with Traditional Media: Because everyone who works in and around Democratic politics is a voracious consumer of traditional political media, our communications strategies over-index on traditional media as a means to get our message out. When many Democratic politicians have something to say, their first instinct is to run to MSNBC or the New York Times. While there is value in those media opportunities, they will almost never reach the voters we most need to persuade.
Have a Social-First Strategy: In the Navigator data, 59% of passive news consumers turn to “social media sites” or “social media creators and influencers” as a major source of news. Trump and the Republicans have a real advantage in this space. Republicans have been better in recent years at using social media, influencers, and creators to get their message out. They almost never even consider going to a traditional media outlet other than Fox News to communicate. Zohran Mamdani’s campaign is a model for Democrats.
Embrace the Progressive Media I am a bit of a broken record on this point (apologies to longtime readers), but Democrats have been unwilling to embrace progressive media. Republicans spent decades and billions of dollars building up a powerful media apparatus to get their message out—and drown out ours. While there are plenty of exceptions, too many Democrats—especially some in the upper echelons of power—don’t understand that politics is now information warfare, and it is in their interest to help grow a progressive media ecosystem that can compete with what the Right has built. That means coming to progressive media to make news, spending ad money on these outlets, and drawing attention to them when possible. For Democratic activists, that means subscribing to and patronizing those outlets. Your dollars are important—your attention is invaluable. The algorithms decide who sees what news, and the number of YouTube and Substack subscribers, TikTok and Instagram followers determines how many people see our content.
Democrats can’t fix our broken media ecosystem, but we can learn to better compete in it. If we don’t, we will keep losing elections—and Republicans will keep passing Big Ugly bills.
Maybe we can start by not kneecapping elected Democrats every time they don't do things exactly the way we want them to. I get it, some of our folks are terrible at messaging, so ignore the ones who are bad at it and lift up those who are good at it. Instead, though, we often drive even more negativity towards Democrats by constantly shredding them for not being perfect on all things.
Celebrate the gifted communicators like Mamdani, AOC, Pete, Pritzker, and a few of the more talented Senators, and ignore the rest. Yes, again, I get it, Schumer is bad at communicating anything - so don't give him more oxygen by racing to social media to describe in agonizing detail about how badly he screwed the pooch. Celebrate when he doesn't puke on his own shoes, but don't add to the churn of negativity.
We have agency - let's start by focusing on those who are doing a great job, and by not making the perfect the enemy of the good.
Hi Dan, I find myself becoming increasingly nervous (shocking) about Dems not being able to message what should be an easy thing to tell people. I know we might not feel the true pain of the bill until after midterms but the Democrats have failed so many times to break thru and the representatives that can get eaten by their own (Zohrhan Mamdani, AOC, Bernie) it's so upsetting and I'm starting to resign myself to the hellscape that the US is becoming and getting ready to send my child in a basket across the sea. Anyway...