American politics is moving to further and further towards absolute polarization like
@mastermind said. The left will only be more left as generation z comes of age because they’re more left than even millennials. Meanwhile, Republicans are moving further right. There is no universe in which people trust Pete in 2024 to bring that left faction together. There’s an old saying that the street wont’t buy you if the house won’t sell you. And Pete’s own generation and the LGBTQIA+ dont fukk with him. By 2028, all the young progressives too young to run will be eligible. Which donors will invest in him at that point? His only hope would be for Sanders to throw him in the administration the way Obama did Hillary.
Ehh, I still disagree. For every article saying gen z is progressive there are articles saying they’re more conservative (due in part to selfishness). It’s silly to try to come up with sweeping conclusions about people 10-23 who haven’t had any real life experience. Also, socially liberal doesn’t equate fiscally liberal.
additionally, as someone who has been broken out of my coastal city bubble and now works for a company HQ’ed in Iowa and with a big work population in “heartland” states, there is a marked difference between my coworkers there and out here in SF. I’m not sold on the breadth of progressivism as opposed to the outsized voice of it being associated with big cities. Lastly, with they way progressive - actually dem voters in general - are concentrated in metro areas and keep continuing to move to metro areas, that necessitates a need for moderates in congress at minimum.
and there will always be a “monied” class in the dem party (we’re in trouble if there isn’t) you can look at millennials like zuckerberg and younger gen x like Jack Dorsey and see that there will remain an appetite for moderate candidates in the dem party - that’s the class that will back someone like Pete.