On Politics: How does Ken Martin survive?
The D.N.C. chair has focused on internal politics, building a loyal base despite tactical disputes.
On Politics
May 22, 2026

Good evening. Tulsi Gabbard is resigning as the director of national intelligence, Democrats are split over redistricting strategy and Joe Biden doesn’t plan to endorse his former health and human services secretary, or anyone else, in the race for California governor. But we’ll focus tonight on Ken Martin, the chairman of the Democratic National Committee.

Ken Martin sits at a desk for a portrait. An American flag is seen behind him.
Ken Martin has fulfilled a campaign promise to dispense more funds to each of the D.N.C.’s state parties. Jenn Ackerman for The New York Times

How does Ken Martin survive?

Let’s talk about Ken Martin and the Democratic National Committee.

Even before he released the meandering, error-ridden and wildly incomplete autopsy of the 2024 election defeat, Martin, the party chairman from Minnesota, was not exactly Mr. Popular in the broader Democratic ecosystem.

The D.N.C. began the year $100 million behind its Republican counterpart. The Democratic Party’s cash on hand, minus debt, is negative $3 million. Democrats who worry about funding infrastructure for the 2028 presidential election had long begun to fret that the party was falling behind.

So, in recent weeks, I’d been asking top Democrats if they had confidence in Martin as the chairman.

“I don’t want to go there,” Senator Bernie Sanders of Vermont, an independent who twice ran for the Democratic presidential nomination, told me last month.

Just this Tuesday, Gov. Gavin Newsom of California — a likely candidate for the 2028 nomination — performed verbal calisthenics rather than deliver a straight answer on Martin.

“The Democratic Party, we’re many parts and it’s a bottom-up party, and it is reflected in different realities, different conditions, in different states,” Newsom said. “And so, from that perspective, I don’t have any call-out in any negative sense about his leadership.”

Representative Hakeem Jeffries of New York, the minority leader, said a couple of weeks ago that Martin should be judged at the ballot box.

“If we were losing elections, he’d be judged by our failures,” Jeffries said. “We’re winning elections, and he should be given some credit for the success.”

And Gov. Abigail Spanberger of Virginia said it didn’t matter who the party chairman was. “I don’t think the Democratic National Committee wins the elections in the first place,” she said.

Those were the feelings about Martin before the autopsy, which on Thursday he admitted that he bungled, spilled into public view.

Yet the Minnesotan, who through an aide declined an interview request, has survived largely because he so far has properly managed internal politics at the 400-odd-member D.N.C., which elected him chairman in February last year and is the constituency he has been most concerned about.

The calls for his resignation from a handful of congressional lawmakers, along with prominent and not-as-prominent podcast hosts, have largely fallen on deaf ears among his supporters within the D.N.C. because Martin has fulfilled a campaign promise to dispense more funds to each of the state parties.

Last month, the D.N.C. sent $15,500 to the Democratic Party in American Samoa, which has no Electoral College votes, and just $10,500 to the Democratic Party of Wisconsin, which is in a regular presidential battleground.

The party members who support Martin are thrilled with this arrangement, because, they say, boosting political infrastructure for the state parties outweighs the longstanding priority of the D.N.C. to focus primarily on presidential elections.

It doesn’t hurt that there are a lot of votes to be had in internal D.N.C. matters from state party officials.

“Not everything the D.N.C. does is about winning the White House,” said Jane Kleeb of Nebraska, a Martin ally who is president of the Association of State Democratic Committees. “If we needed a D.N.C. to only be focused on the presidential elections, if that’s what you think the D.N.C. is about, then you’re missing the whole purpose that the D.N.C. is the whole infrastructure for the entire Democratic Party.”

In the coming months, as Democrats broadly try to win enough midterm elections to gain control of Congress so that they can check President Trump’s power next year, we can expect the discussion about the national committee’s priorities to continue.

Martin has set the D.N.C. on a course to ship funds to all the state parties, while he has not proven adept at bringing money in. And as the 2028 cycle grows nearer and formally kicks off after the midterms, voices concerned most about how to win back the White House are likely to become louder and more influential.

Those divergent priorities cannot help but come into conflict and will require that the party chair be viewed as a neutral arbiter and respected figure. How Martin manages that coming storm will say a lot about his ability to guide the party through a primary season that will require deft management of the early-state calendar, copious debates and inevitable rules disputes among candidates and supporters.

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Debbie Wasserman Schultz speaks into an array of microphones during a news conference.
Representative Debbie Wasserman Schultz. Scott McIntyre for The New York Times

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Secretary of Commerce Howard Lutnick. Tierney L. Cross/The New York Times

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