Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10
Democrats Recast 2026 Values Politics as 22% Bush-Era Moral Voter Label Fades
Updated
Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10

Democrats Recast 2026 Values Politics as 22% Bush-Era Moral Voter Label Fades

2 articles · Updated · The New York Times · Jun 10

Summary

  • Democrats in the 2026 campaign are framing economic inequality, social justice and family pressures as moral issues, challenging Republicans’ long-held claim to "values" politics.
  • That shift reflects a broader argument for "moral capitalism" as voters confront A.I.-driven anxiety over work, community and the social costs of technological change.
  • James Talarico’s Texas Senate campaign has become the clearest expression of that message, with the Presbyterian seminarian openly invoking scripture and a Christian-left call to "start flipping tables."
  • The approach revives an older American tradition that links religious and secular reform—from the 1907 social gospel to the civil rights movement—rather than the narrower culture-war model tied to 2004.

Insights

What principles from historical moral movements can solve today's societal challenges?
How can society align advancing AI technology with core human values and the common good?