From David Hogg <[email protected]>
Subject It’s not about progressive vs. moderate.
Date November 15, 2025 4:45 PM
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[ [link removed] ]Leaders We Deserve





Hi John. David here.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve seen a lot of bad takes about last week’s
election.

The pundits, the podcasters, and everyone with a ring light and a Patreon
debating whether Democrats should move to the left or the right — they’re
making this election way more complicated than it actually was.

But before I get to what Tuesday really showed us, I need your help first.
Our mid-month fundraising deadline hits at midnight, and we’re not where
we need to be. If we want to build on the wins we just saw and prove that
young progressives winning is the future, not an anomaly, we need to close
this gap.

The best way to do that is with steady, predictable support — the kind
that lets us focus on executing our strategy and electing progressives
instead of scrambling at the last minute to hit deadlines (and filling
your inbox with extra emails).

[ [link removed] ]Will you start a monthly recurring donation of $5 or
anything else to sustain this movement long-term?

Use the links in this email to start a recurring contribution to Leaders We
Deserve.

[ [link removed] ]Donate $5 »

Here’s what last week’s election actually showed us:

Voters reward candidates who listen, speak clearly about affordability,
and offer specific solutions — not empty talking points.

The candidates who followed that playbook won, regardless of ideology:

* Zohran Mamdani, a democratic socialist, won the NYC mayoral race.
* Abigail Spanberger and Mikie Sherrill, two moderates, won their races
for governor in Virginia and New Jersey.
* Democrats of every stripe racked up local and state wins in Georgia,
Pennsylvania, Texas, Mississippi, and more.

Different ideologies. Same tactics. One big tent — and one clear strategy

The takeaway from this election isn’t to “go left” or “go centrist.”

It’s to go where the people are. Show up, listen, and offer real
solutions.

And in many ways, it’s about doing the opposite of what national Democrats
did in 2024. We can’t spew meaningless talking points or tell voters to
ignore what they’re living every day. We need to talk honestly about
health care, housing, groceries, and everything else making life way too
expensive.

And there’s one more lesson worth talking about:

When we trust young people to lead, they deliver. It’s not the disaster
the establishment says it will be. Young candidates know how to
communicate clearly, organize aggressively, and inspire new voters who
have felt ignored for years. We know this because they already have the
cards stacked against them, so to win they have to have their act together
way more than other candidates. They aren’t “too bold” or “too young” —
they’re exactly bold and young enough AND they have the lived experience
that many elected officials can only pretend to know, like facing a job
market where there are few entry-level jobs because of the proliferation
of AI.

Now we have to carry these lessons forward into the 2026 midterms and two
crucial upcoming runoffs for LWD-backed candidates in Atlanta and Houston.
We have a narrow window to build on this momentum before the narrative
shifts and the same old voices try to rewrite what last week proved.

[ [link removed] ]If you’re ready to help us keep winning, can you commit to a
$5 monthly donation to keep our movement moving forward?

[ [link removed] ]Donate $5 »

Last Tuesday proved young leaders aren’t the future — they’re the present.
We’re not waiting our turn anymore. We’re here now. And we’re winning.

Thanks for helping keep this momentum alive,
John.

— David Hogg





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