Now, with Democrats at risk of losing their majority this fall, Maloney is trying to answer one critical question about how voters view his party. “If they agree with us on the issues,” the DCCC chairman asked, “why don’t they like us more?”
Maloney, 55, is in his 10th year representing parts of the Hudson Valley north of New York City, which voted for Donald Trump in 2016 and President Biden in 2020, and has found some “answers that aren’t comfortable” for his party to hear. He has taken on the role of truth teller, trying to get his caucus shifted away from issues that he thinks repel swing voters.
Rep. Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.), one of the liberal newcomers to the caucus, agreed with most of Maloney’s “preachy” assessment, although he thinks the party is more popular than Maloney suggests.
Maloney got assigned to do a “deep dive,” as he labeled it, almost an internal affairs probe of what went wrong. His team focused heavily on data and analytics, identifying 350 characteristics that applied to each House race. Instead of worrying about previous presidential performance in districts, he wanted the DCCC to analyze their rural-urban breakdown and education levels, devoting resources to highly educated suburbs.
Maloney insists there is hope for his party. The decennial redistricting of House seats has gone well for Democrats, and their incumbents hold a combined $80 million fundraising edge over their Republican opponents. Mostly, however, he worries how voters will grade Democrats on the “Maloney brothers test.”
“They like what we’re doing,” Maloney said, “but they’re not sure about us.”

