With the 2026 midterm elections looming, Democrats across the ideological spectrum are rallying around an “affordability” message aimed at addressing voters’ cost-of-living worries. Some party strategists and liberal critics argue the framing helps unify Democrats but is unlikely to satisfy voters’ broader anger about inequality without sharper, more explicitly populist policies.
Ahead of the 2026 midterm elections, Democrats from New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani to centrist figures such as Virginia’s Abigail Spanberger have increasingly embraced an “affordability agenda,” arguing the party should focus on the everyday cost pressures facing households.
One legislative example is the American Affordability Act, introduced by Reps. Mike Thompson (D-Calif.) and Richard E. Neal (D-Mass.). The measure proposes a package of tax credits and tax changes that includes provisions related to family and child care support, education-related tax relief, and expanded health insurance premium tax credits.
The shift is partly driven by polling showing that the cost of living ranks among voters’ leading concerns. Advocates of the approach argue it gives Democrats a clear economic message to run against a Republican Party they portray as out of step with household financial stress—an argument that contrasts with the democracy-centered warnings that dominated parts of Vice President Kamala Harris’s 2024 campaign messaging.
But critics say “affordability” can be more slogan than solution, and that it may not overcome disagreements over cultural issues. The Nation pointed to the 2025 special election in Tennessee’s 7th Congressional District, where Democratic candidate Aftyn Behn ran with the slogan “Feed kids, fix roads, fund hospitals,” but faced attacks linking her to prior calls to “abolish” or “defund” the police—an issue the article said complicated her effort to broaden support outside Nashville.
Skeptics also argue that lowering costs is difficult to deliver quickly, regardless of rhetoric. The Nation noted that President Donald Trump promised to bring prices down, while inflation remained elevated through much of his first year back in office.
Debates over how to deliver affordability often split Democrats into competing camps. Some emphasize reversing or reducing tariffs, trimming regulations, and adding new tax credits. Others argue cost pressures—such as groceries, utilities and housing—are driven largely by domestic factors, including constraints on housing supply and regulation.
Supporters of a growth-first approach frequently point to strong topline economic data. Government figures initially estimated that real GDP grew at a 4.3% annual rate in the third quarter of 2025, later revised to 4.4% in an updated estimate. Yet critics argue that broad growth figures can feel disconnected from daily life, particularly when asset gains are concentrated among high-wealth households.
Federal Reserve distributional data show the top 1% of families own just over half of corporate equities and mutual fund shares, underscoring how stock-market gains can accrue disproportionately to the wealthiest households.
Democrats have floated other ideas aimed at easing specific cost pressures, including proposals tied to utility regulation and grid investment, minimum-wage increases, and efforts to reduce prescription drug costs. The Nation argued, however, that “affordability” language can also serve as cover for incrementalism. It cited Spanberger’s use of affordability arguments in opposing the repeal of Virginia’s right-to-work law, and highlighted how Sen. Jacky Rosen of Nevada has emphasized “no tax on tips” legislation as part of her affordability pitch.
Even some Democratic-aligned strategists have urged the party to go beyond a cost-of-living message. The Nation pointed to comments by longtime Democratic operative James Carville, who has called for a more overtly populist economic approach.
The broader question for Democrats heading into 2026 is whether an affordability-focused agenda—built around targeted credits and cost relief—will be enough to persuade voters who see deeper structural problems in wages, prices and inequality, or whether candidates will be pushed toward a more confrontational message aimed at corporate power and concentrated wealth.