Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand 鈥88 Predicts Comeback for Democrats

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The Senatorial Campaign Committee chair spoke in the 鈥100 Days鈥 series.

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Kirsten Gillibrand speaking to moderators
Charles Wheelan 鈥88, faculty director of the Center for Business, Government, and Society at Tuck; Lucia Vitali 鈥26; and Alex Azar III 鈥25 listen to U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand 鈥88, D-NY. (Photo by Eli Burakian 鈥00)
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Following their ballot-box losses in November, Democrats are working hard to regain control of the Senate in the 2026 midterm elections. U.S. Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand 鈥88, D-NY, thinks if they campaign strategically on issues voters care most about, a 鈥渂lue wave鈥 is within reach. 

Gillibrand received a warm welcome on campus April 25, as the fifth speaker in the , sponsored by 线上赌场 Dialogues and the in collaboration with the Center for Business, Government, and Society, 线上赌场 Democrats, 线上赌场 Conservatives, and the 线上赌场 Political Union. The discussion was co-moderated by , clinical professor of business administration and faculty director at the Center for Business, Government, and Society at the , Alex Azar III 鈥25 of the 线上赌场 Conservatives, and Lucia Vitali 鈥26 of 线上赌场 Democrats.

Gillibrand spoke candidly to an audience of 190 in Filene Auditorium and another 200 viewers about her party鈥檚 鈥渟oul-searching,鈥 saying that 鈥渢he biggest challenge for Democrats is that people who voted for Trump didn鈥檛 think that they would help them on the concerns that matter to them the most.鈥 

She said voters鈥 top three priorities were inflation, crime, and immigration, and that most Democrats who addressed those worries head-on were victorious. But in the waning days of the presidential campaign, Gillibrand said Trump鈥檚 challenger, former Vice President Kamala Harris, chose instead to emphasize threats to democracy and reproductive rights.

鈥淲e lost a percentage of white men, Black men, Hispanic men, Asian men, and young men,鈥 Gillibrand noted. Among women, she said, 58% had helped Joe Biden win the presidency, but only 54% voted for Harris. 

Nonetheless, as chair of the Democratic Senatorial Campaign Committee for the next cycle, Gillibrand is optimistic about the 2026 midterm election.

鈥淢y job is to try to flip the Senate,鈥 she said. 鈥淭he weight of energy always goes against the party in power. People never really feel very comfortable when one party has all the power. It tends to create wave elections.鈥

Gillibrand said Democrats can and will rebuild their traditional bases of support with clearer messaging, smarter use of social media, and relentless grassroots campaigning. 

鈥淚f we do those things, I believe we will build a very strong blue wave,鈥 she predicted. 鈥淎nd it鈥檚 because President Trump is overreaching.鈥

鈥淲hen you begin to say you can鈥檛 answer the phone for the Social Security Administration and the online portals keep crashing, and you say you鈥檙e going to cut Medicare or Medicaid, that is massive overreach. And when you do that, voters lose faith in you because you鈥檙e not caring about the things you said you would fix, like the cost of things, the cost of your health care, the cost of your food.鈥

Gillibrand urged Americans who oppose the actions of the Trump administration to press for constructive change, as litigation challenging his use of executive power unfolds.

鈥淎dvocacy matters. Speaking out matters, and fighting for what we believe in matters. And, hopefully, we will persuade people along the way as opposed to dividing people. Because we need to bring this country back together again,鈥 Gillibrand said, drawing applause. 

Wheelan asked Gillibrand to speak directly to young people in the audience who might be wondering how best to engage in civic life.

鈥淧ublic service鈥攚hether you鈥檙e a teacher, whether you鈥檙e a doctor or a nurse, whether you鈥檙e a firefighter, whether you鈥檙e in elected office, whether you work in a not-for-profit, whether you work in any public service organization鈥攊s extremely rewarding. You wake up every day and you know that your job is to help people to actually make a difference in their lives, to solve a problem, to be the difference that they need,鈥 she said.

Moving forward, Gillibrand said she would work to advance legislation that provides paid family leave鈥攁 goal she said is shared by the Trump administration鈥攕trengthens Social Security by requiring investment at all income levels, adds hearing and vision coverage to Medicare, and improves access to early childhood education. 

鈥淚f you can start an idea from a place of bipartisanship, it鈥檚 so much easier to build something that鈥檚 really resilient and useful and good,鈥 she said. 

Gillibrand鈥檚 willingness to work across the aisle resonated with attendee Ayden Cardoso 鈥28. 鈥淒emocrats during this time have to be optimistic because they don鈥檛 have control of the House or the Senate,鈥 he said. 鈥淪o if our best solution is to work with the opposing side the best that we can, then so be it.鈥 His twin brother, Jaleel, agreed, but also said Democrats should adhere to their core values, such as fostering diversity, equity, and inclusion, and should not 鈥渁ttempt to continuously mimic what the Republicans are doing.鈥

Samantha Bevins 鈥25, a government major and former White House intern, praised Gillibrand鈥檚 call for advocacy. 鈥淚 think right now a lot of students feel like there isn鈥檛 much they can do, that their voices aren鈥檛 being heard. And what she鈥檚 saying is that actually they are being heard, and that Congressmen are listening, governors are listening, mayors are listening. She鈥檚 listening.鈥

The 100 Days Series will continue May 8 with .

Charlotte Albright