Michigan Sen. Elissa Slotkin suggested Thursday that Democratic congressional leadership should consider making way for new leaders if they are unable to adapt following the party’s losses in the 2024 election, as reported [1] by the New York Post.
Slotkin made the remarks during an appearance on SiriusXM’s Straight Shooter with Stephen A, where she argued that Democrats have not fully recovered from their defeat in the last presidential election and continue to struggle with defining a clear direction for the party.

According to Slotkin, Democrats lost focus by attempting to appeal to too many constituencies instead of presenting voters with a simple, unified message.
“To me, the lesson was simple. Democrats had too many priorities. They tried to make everyone happy and answer every question. When you prioritize everything, no one knows what you actually stand for,” Slotkin told Stephen A. Smith.
She contrasted that approach with President Donald Trump’s campaign message during the 2024 election.
In contrast, “Donald Trump came in with one clear message. He said, ‘I’m going to make your life more affordable. I’m going to put more money in your pocket’. … He won because he kept his message simple and focused on the issue Americans cared most about.”
Slotkin argued that the Democratic Party continues to debate its future instead of settling on a consistent message for voters.
She said that even more than a year after Trump’s election victory, “every day there’s a debate within the party about the path forward.”
The Michigan senator said the party requires substantial changes in leadership and strategy if it hopes to regain political momentum.
“That’s why I believe we need significant new leadership,” she said. “The old models are no longer working, and that includes the Democratic Party.”
Slotkin also described what she sees as an internal problem within her party’s leadership structure.
The senator likened Democrats to a “circular firing squad,” where “everyone is reacting to the crisis, but too few people are talking about what they actually want to accomplish.”
“To me, that’s a fundamental failure of leadership,” she urged.
Host Stephen A. Smith later asked Slotkin whether her comments were directed specifically at Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York and House Minority Leader Hakeem Jeffries of New York.

