Bonfire Night: Democrats Have a Spark Again or Lost the Plot?
Remember, remember the 5th of November. The Gunpowder Plot happened 420 years ago, yet I woke up this morning not to a treason plot, but to election news from the U.S. Special elections in New York, Virginia, New Jersey, and elsewhere revealed more than just local outcomes—they highlighted the rise of outsiders, the anti-establishment mood, and the persistent influence of affordability on voters’ minds.
Zohran Mamdani’s win in New York as the youngest mayor in a century, and the first Muslim and South Asian-American, shows that progressives can channel hope and authenticity into political victories. Across the board, Democrats found success by listening to voters instead of lecturing. The blueprint is simple: focus on what matters to people’s daily lives—housing, bills, healthcare—and show how Republican chaos makes things worse.
Meanwhile, America’s soft power and domestic credibility are waning, and similar forces are creeping into British politics. The lesson is universal: compromise, authenticity, and addressing real concerns matter more than ideology or spin. Managing decline isn’t enough; people want change.