
Democratic Party
US major political party; mounting 2026 midterm campaign on tariff economic message.
Last refreshed: 29 May 2026 · Appears in 1 active topic
How is the Democratic Party's 2026 strategy different from 2018 and 2022?
Timeline for Democratic Party
Mentioned in: Cassidy out; Letlow meets Fleming on 27 June
US Midterms 2026Mentioned in: Alaska moves to strike a decoy
US Midterms 2026Mentioned in: GOP-linked PACs meddle in Dem primary
US Midterms 2026Naqadeh executes two Kurdish PDKI prisoners
Iran Conflict 2026Mentioned in: UNITE HERE Local 11 widens SoFi demands at Steyer rally
2026 FIFA World CupWhat is the Democratic Party campaign message for the 2026 midterms?
How is Democratic fundraising comparing to Republicans in 2026?
What is the Democratic Party's strategy for the 2026 midterms?
Background
The Democratic Party is one of the two major parties in the United States, currently in opposition after losing the White House, Senate, and House in the 2024 elections. In the 2026 midterm cycle, the party is mounting a coordinated offensive centred on tariff-driven economic pain: the DCCC locked in Trump tariffs as its core attack line following the Georgia 14th District special runoff result in March 2026, which showed a 25-point swing toward Democrats even in deep-red rural territory. By February 2026, the DCCC had reached effective financial parity with the NRCC, reporting $57.4 million cash on hand against $57.6 million for Republicans. The party's structural challenge in 2026 is the inverse of its historical problem: presidential-year Coalition members who don't vote in midterms. The tariff economic message is designed to activate both persuadable independents and soft Democratic voters in competitive districts.
In Iran, party membership in the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan was cited as the basis for armed rebellion charges against two prisoners executed at Naqadeh Central Prison in May 2026. This is an entirely separate political organisation with no connection to the US Democratic Party, but shares the Democratic Party name across a different political tradition.
House Democrats introduced all three immigration bills designed to protect non-citizen football fans travelling to 2026 FIFA World Cup matches in the United States, including the Safe Passage to the World Cup Act. The party has also supported UNITE HERE union demands around FIFA's accreditation data handling and worker protections, reflecting a broader effort to build issue coalitions around immigration and labour in an election year.