The Democrat Party's post-Trump political wasteland just got even more embarrassing – and this time, the brutal assessment is coming from inside their own propaganda machine at CNN.
Chief data analyst Harry Enten, speaking with anchor John Berman, didn't mince words when evaluating the Democrats' prospects for 2028: he called their likely presidential candidates "a total clown car."
Think about that for a moment, Patriots. When even CNN – the network that spent eight years running interference for the Democrats and pushing anti-Trump hysteria – admits their bench looks like a circus act, you know the party is in complete meltdown mode.
"A total clown car," Enten said, apparently unable to spin the dismal reality facing his preferred political party.
This assessment comes as President Trump's second-term agenda continues steamrolling through Washington, with the MAGA movement stronger than ever and the America First coalition proving it's not just a political fad – it's a permanent realignment of American politics.
The Democrats' Talent Vacuum
While Enten was discussing details from a new memoir that apparently triggered this honest moment, the bigger picture is clear: the Democrat Party has no viable leaders who can appeal to actual Americans outside their coastal elite bubbles.
After years of pushing radical woke policies, defunding police, opening borders, and attacking American families, what exactly do they have to offer voters in 2028? More transgender bathroom mandates? Higher gas prices? Critical Race Theory in schools?
The contrast couldn't be starker. While President Trump and Vice President Vance are delivering on promises to secure our border, restore American energy dominance, and drain the swamp, Democrats are stuck trying to find someone – anyone – who doesn't remind voters of their disastrous Biden years.
When your own allies in the media are calling your future presidential field a "clown car," maybe it's time to admit the American people have definitively rejected your anti-American agenda. The question isn't whether Republicans will win in 2028 – it's by how much.
