Opinion | The Road Ahead for the Democrats: Here Are Some Directions – The New York Times

Near the end of that year, it was much sadder: Dec. 7, 1941, a date which will live in infamy.

F.D.R.s outstanding speech-writing team included Harry L. Hopkins, Samuel I. Rosenman, Adolf A. Berle Jr., Benjamin V. Cohen and the Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright Robert Sherwood, all masters of the power and emotional resonances of words.

My advice to President Biden: Ask playwrights and writers like Lin-Manuel Miranda, Aaron Sorkin, James Patterson, Sarah Ruhl and others if they have some ideas for Democratic messaging.

Susan DunnWilliamstown, Mass.The writer, a professor of humanities at Williams College, is the author of 1940: F.D.R., Willkie, Lindbergh, Hitler: The Election Amid the Storm.

To the Editor:

When the Democrats policies fail to generate popular support, they inevitably chalk it up to poor messaging. The problem, however, is not that they lack a pithy, bumper sticker worthy marketing message for their programs.

The problem is what they are trying to sell: excessive regulation that drives up prices and discourages innovation; social welfare policies that largely benefit the wealthy and harm those they are supposed to help; and crony-capitalist subsidies for politically favored constituencies.

If Democrats think a new slogan is needed, they could do worse than President Clintons declaration in his 1996 State of the Union address: The era of big government is over.

Kenneth A. MargolisChappaqua, N.Y.

To the Editor:

So the Democrats are on the hunt for a catchy bumper-sticker slogan to replace Build Back Better and bring them success in the midterms.

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Opinion | The Road Ahead for the Democrats: Here Are Some Directions - The New York Times

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