- by foxnews
- 03 Apr 2025
While Republicans have largely been told to stay home, Democrats seem to be driving the narrative for the first time since Trump returned to the White House.
Democrats last week launched a coordinated effort to host "People's Town Halls" in all 50 states after disruptive protests led Republican leadership to advise against hosting in-person town halls. The first week of town halls brought a new wave of political drama and engagement resembling that of an election year.
"When folks get out of the DC bubble and into communities across the country, there is one undeniably clear trend emerging: Americans are feeling betrayed by Republicans. Across party lines, people are furious that their lives, jobs, retirement, and health care are being cast aside to enrich the already ultra-wealthy. The reception to the People's Town Halls has been thunderous - and we're keeping them going through all 50 states. Americans want to be heard and Democrats are listening," DNC Chair Ken Martin told Fox News Digital in a statement.
"Sometimes when I need a little boost, I look at the @JDVance portrait in the White House and thank the Lord," Musk replied on X to Walz's comment at the "The People vs Musk" event on Tuesday.
Like Walz, Democrats individually capitalized on the narrative that Republicans aren't showing up for their constituents, and town halls began popping up in red districts across the country. Following their big November losses, the Democrats' town halls have become an opportunity for lawmakers to score points with the slew of Americans infuriated with Trump's second term and Musk's DOGE cuts.
Last Friday, the Democratic National Committee (DNC) seized the chance to present a united front following weeks of Republican criticism that Democrats lack clear messaging during Trump's second term.
The DNC's coordinated effort includes the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee (DCCC), the Association of State Democratic Committees (ASDC) and Democratic state parties to "hold vulnerable Republican members of Congress accountable for their refusal to face their constituents and answer for their votes to put billionaires above working people."
The DNC's initial launch included at least nine town halls in Arizona, Colorado, Florida, Iowa, Michigan, Missouri, Nebraska and Pennsylvania. As of Friday, there were at least 11 more town halls scheduled this weekend and next week. The DNC and Democratic state parties have held a total of 22 events so far in 13 states, the DNC tells Fox News Digital.
As Democrats' town halls find their way to every corner of the United States, David McIntosh, president of Club for Growth, a top conservative group, is now urging Congressional Republicans to participate in town halls, Fox News confirmed.
But Democrats' town halls haven't been without their own political theater. The Florida Democratic Party created "missing" posters of Republican representatives for their town halls. One by one in Clearwater on Saturday, Pinellas County constituents took turns addressing a "missing" poster of Rep. Ana Paulina Luna, R-Fla. Conservatives on social media slammed the "missing" posters as "nothing authentic or compelling."
Luntz compared the Democrats' latest move to holding posters during Trump's joint address to Congress and the coordinated effort by protest groups to disrupt Republican town halls. Others on social media called it "embarrassing." Luna's spokesperson said she has been available at "numerous events" and that the Florida representative doesn't "work for the leftist mob."
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