There’s a moment in almost every good conversation when someone stops reciting facts and starts telling the truth. The words carry memory, emotion, contradiction, and they stick with you. I’m convinced that moment is where real politics begins. I was reminded of that when Rachel Maddow joined me on At Our Table. Rachel is a force of intellect, but more importantly, she’s a force of clarity. She understands something Democrats often forget: people don’t move because of data. They move because of stories. They move when they recognize themselves, or someone they love, in the stakes. Storytelling is how people hold on to each other when the world is falling apart. It’s how you convince tired people to keep going. It’s how you tell the truth not just to inform, but to illuminate. And that, in many ways, is the challenge in front of the Democratic Party right now. Democrats Know the Policy. But Do We Tell the Story?Democrats are often at our worst when we’re at our smartest. We can quote the percentage of families lifted out of poverty by the Child Tax Credit. We can explain the subsidies in the Affordable Care Act down to decimal points. We can describe infrastructure investments in a language so technical that only three people in the room actually understand what’s being said. But the question voters are really asking is simpler: Do you see me? Do you understand what I’m carrying? And do you know where we’re going? Republicans understand this. Their storytelling is built on fear. They want you to fear change and losing a world that never really existed. That story is simple, emotional, and terrifyingly effective. It gives people a narrative to hold onto even when the facts say otherwise. But fear is not the only story that moves people. It’s certainly not the only story this country has to offer. Storytelling isn’t just about describing the world as it is. It’s about helping people imagine what’s possible. That’s a muscle Democrats have but don’t flex nearly enough. Hope Still MattersWhen Rachel and I talked about the AIDS crisis, she described a time when our generation genuinely believed it might not grow old. The losses came daily. You didn’t have to read statistics because you could feel the grief in your own friend group. Yet the thing that kept activists fighting wasn’t denial. It was hope born of discipline, a belief that human lives were worth saving even when the world said otherwise. Storytelling saved lives. And it kept a movement alive long enough to win. Right now, people in this country are exhausted. They’re watching prices rise, rights evaporate, and institutions wobble under the weight of extremism. They’re seeing cruelty presented as strength and chaos passed off as leadership. Fear is in the air. Cynicism is the water we swim in now. This is precisely why the Democratic story matters. The rehearsed lines and technical memos have their place, but the current moment calls for the story of who we are and where we’re going. So What Is the Story Democrats Need to Tell?It begins with something simple: America is still worth fighting for because Americans are still worth fighting for. That’s not a slogan. It’s a worldview. Democrats need to tell the story of the parent working two jobs and still showing up at the school play. The veteran rebuilding a life after years of being ignored. The small-town nurse holding an entire community together. The teacher buying supplies with her own paycheck. The immigrant entrepreneur keeping Main Street alive. The student activist who refuses to accept the world as it is. People don’t want to be lectured. They want to feel seen. They want to know their struggles aren’t abstract ideas—but the very reason we govern. From there, the story continues: We’ve been here before. And we’ve built our way out before. This country has faced pandemics, depressions, wars, backslides in rights, and powerful people who tried to dismantle democracy itself. Every single time, Americans fought back—not because they were certain they would win, but because they believed their children deserved a future. And that’s the story Democrats must tell now: We are the party that believes in our future. Our future promises affordable health care, functioning public schools, the freedom to vote, the right to decide our own bodies, clean air and safe streets, dignity for workers, love for families of every kind. Our future is one where the government isn’t a weapon but a partner. But There’s a Hard Part TooStorytelling requires honesty—not just about what’s possible, but about what’s broken. People know when things hurt. They know when democracy is fragile. Rachel reminded us that history always catches up—that no act of injustice goes unanswered forever, even if accountability takes time. That’s a story too: the story of a country that drifts but does not have to stay lost. Democrats shouldn’t pretend everything is fine. But we also shouldn’t surrender the narrative to fear. Instead, we tell the truth plainly: Yes, things are hard. Yes, dangers are real. But the story isn’t over, and you are part of how it ends. That’s the difference between despair and determination. We can build something better, not because it’s easy but because it’s necessary. That’s the hope Democrats must carry and communicate. Storytelling is not a luxury in politics. It is leadership. The Story We Choose Will Decide Who We BecomeI believe Democrats have the better policies. But that’s not enough. We need the better story. It’s a story of hope, not as a feeling but as a decision. And it starts with this: We are not done. We are not defeated. And we are not afraid to fight for the America we deserve. That’s the story. Now we have to tell it and live it every single day. And if Democrats want to win in 2026, we must speak in stories that carry a soul and a heartbeat. Our stories must make people feel seen, understood, and part of a collective future worth fighting for. Because facts inform, but stories move. You’re currently a free subscriber to Jaime’s Table. For the full experience, upgrade your subscription. |
Sunday, December 7, 2025
The Story We Tell and the Story We Choose
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