Democrats have an issue that runs deeper than the 2024 election. They’ve an issue that runs deeper than Elon Musk’s assault on the federal government. Take a look at the locations they govern: strongholds like New York and Illinois and the place I’m from, California. They’re shedding individuals. [CLIP: Since the pandemic started, California is seeing an exodus, a mass exodus.] In 2023, California noticed a internet lack of 268,000 residents. In New York, 179,000. [CLIP: New York City is losing some folks, some residents. But it turns out that New York State is also seeing the population drop.] [CLIP: And in Illinois, the Illinois residents have been fleeing the state at an alarming rate. The state’s population has been in decline for the 10th year in a row. Why are all these people leaving? In surveys, the dominant reason is simply this: The cost of living is too high. It is too expensive to get child care. It’s almost like paying another mortgage. It is too expensive to buy a home. [CLIP: It’s very unrealistic to be able to put a down payment on a $2 million home with two kids surviving.] You find yourself having to dwell too far out of your work. And they also’re going to locations the place all of that’s cheaper. [CLIP: Every day someone is moving to the Florida area.] [CLIP: She got an apartment three times the size of the one she had in Manhattan. Plus, there’s a wraparound deck.] [CLIP: Yeah, I can definitely understand that. Four bedroom, three bath house I had in Texas.] Yeah, I do know these households. These households are my mates. I’ve lived with them in these locations, and I’ve watched a lot of them transfer away from the place they love, the town they wished to boost their kids as a result of they may not afford to dwell there. You can’t be the celebration of working households when the locations you govern are locations working households can’t afford to dwell. You aren’t the celebration of working households when the locations you govern are locations working households can’t afford to dwell. Within the American political system, to lose individuals is to lose energy. If these traits maintain, the 2030 census will shift the electoral faculty sharply to the suitable. The states that Kamala Harris received in 2024 will lose home seats and electoral faculty votes. The states that Trump received will achieve them. So in that electoral faculty, a Democrat may win each single state. Harris received in 2024 and in addition win Michigan and Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, and nonetheless lose the presidency. There’s a coverage failure haunting blue states. It has change into too onerous to construct and too costly to dwell within the locations the place Democrats govern. Our politics is break up proper now between a left that defends authorities even when it doesn’t work, and a proper that desires to destroy authorities even when it’s working. What we want is a political celebration that truly makes authorities work. Democrats could be that celebration. They need to be that celebration. But it surely requires them to confront what they’ve executed to make authorities fail. I may inform you a dozen tales in my new e book, I do. However let me inform you right here only one. In 1982, greater than 40 years in the past, California Governor Jerry Brown signed a invoice to check what it might it take to construct a excessive pace rail system throughout the state. [CLIP: Make a choice. Change the chemistry of the country.] He favored what he noticed, and so did California’s voters. In 1996, California fashioned a excessive pace rail authority to plan for development. Excessive pace rail just isn’t some futuristic expertise like nuclear fusion or flying automobiles. Japan broke floor on excessive pace rail again in 1959. You’ll be able to experience on these trains elsewhere. I’ve ridden on these trains. So in 2008, California’s voters authorised Prop 1A, which put aside $10 billion to start development on a excessive pace rail line that may join Los Angeles and San Francisco. It will run by way of the Central Valley. It will get there in underneath two hours and 40 minutes. And it might value, they thought, $33.6 billion. California’s Excessive-Velocity Rail Authority estimated we’d be capable to experience that prepare by the 12 months 2020. And the information stored getting higher for prime pace rail. In 2009, President Barack Obama signed the American Restoration and Reinvestment Act into regulation. That had a whole lot of billions of {dollars} to construct the infrastructure of the longer term, and high-speed rail specifically, had captured Obama’s creativeness. [CLIP: Imagine boarding a train in the center of a city. No racing to an airport and across a terminal. No delays. No sitting on the tarmac, no lost luggage, no taking off your shoes. Now, all of this is not some fanciful pie in the sky vision of the future. It is now. It is happening right now. It’s been happening for decades. The problem is, it’s been happening elsewhere. Not here.] Obama wished it to occur right here. In California, the place the voters had already begun planning and funding high-speed rail, was the apparent place. And the political stars simply stored aligning. Excessive pace rail is foremost champion returned — [CLIP: And the most expensive campaign in California history.] — when Jerry Brown received again the governor’s mansion virtually 30 years after leaving it. [CLIP: Now, 30 years later, within weeks of a revised business plan that will enable us to begin initial construction before the year is out.] But it surely didn’t occur. By 2018, it was brutally clear that nothing was going to be rideable by 2020. And the associated fee estimate, it wasn’t $33 billion anymore. It had risen and risen and risen. By 2018, it was $76 billion. [CLIP: Let’s — Let’s level about the high speed rail.] The subsequent 12 months, 2019, Gavin Newsom, who had served as Brown’s lieutenant governor, succeeded him as governor. [CLIP: Now, there simply isn’t a path to get from Sacramento to San Diego, let alone from San Francisco to L.A. I wish there were. However, we do have the capacity to complete a high-speed rail link between Merced and Bakersfield] Merced and Bakersfield, a line nobody would have licensed. If it had been the plan that was introduced within the first place. The newest estimate only for that line is $35 billion, as a lot as the complete L.A. to S.F. line was estimated to value in 2008. And even this Merced and Bakersfield line, it’s not predicted to start carrying passengers till someday between 2030 and 2033 — if all goes nicely. I’m informed now that ending the L.A. to San Francisco line will value $110 billion a minimum of. California doesn’t have wherever close to that sort of funding for prime pace rail, in order that they’re constructing what they’ll proper now with no thought of how they’re ever going to complete. What went so improper right here? In October 2023, I went to Fresno, California. And what I heard as I walked that observe with the engineers who’ve constructed it and the individuals overseeing it — it wasn’t engineering issues, it was political issues. There are elements of the high-speed rail line that intersect with freight rail strains, however the freight rail strains are so busy within the vacation season that some impose a development moratorium from October to December. So in these areas, development simply stops for months, yearly. Why did the authority start development within the Central Valley, slightly than close to the megacities? Effectively, one purpose was that when California utilized for federal cash, the Obama administration wished bids that may enhance air high quality in poor communities. And so the $3 billion the federal authorities provided, it wasn’t actually to construct high-speed rail. It was to start constructing high-speed rail in ways in which addressed air air pollution in particular communities. The Central Valley is poorer and extra polluted than coastal California, so federal funding went there. And so did the preliminary development. However that made it much less doubtless. Excessive pace rail would generate the ridership, the political assist or the monetary backing to ever truly end. And that, in fact, is unhealthy for air air pollution in Fresno and throughout the state. Trains are cleaner than automobiles, however excessive pace rail has needed to clear each inch of its route by way of environmental opinions, with lawsuits lurking round each nook. The environmental evaluate course of started in 2012, and by 2024, 12 years later, it nonetheless wasn’t executed. What has taken so lengthy on high-speed rail just isn’t hammering nails or pouring concrete. [CLIP: Good morning all. Welcome to the California High-Speed Rail finance and audit committee meeting.] It’s course of. It’s negotiating. [CLIP: Good morning, ladies and gentlemen. I would like to go over some important information for members of the public.] [CLIP: Speakers will be called upon in the order that their hands are raised.] [CLIP: Good morning. Elmer Lizardi here, on behalf of the California Labor Federation] [CLIP: The International Brotherhood of Boilermakers.] [CLIP: My question is, why do we have to wait almost a whole year later to find out that they’re not in compliance?] Negotiating with courts, with funders, with enterprise homeowners, with residence homeowners, with farm homeowners, with different elements of the federal government. These negotiations value time, which value cash. These negotiations result in adjustments within the route or the design or the development. And that prices cash and that prices time. These negotiations are the product of many years of liberal insurance policies meant to guard in opposition to authorities abuses. They usually might try this, however in addition they forestall authorities from constructing rapidly or affordably. Within the time California has spent failing to finish its 500-mile high-speed rail system, China has constructed greater than 23,000 miles of high-speed rail. The Chinese language authorities doesn’t spend years debating with judges over whether or not it wants to maneuver a storage facility. Its energy results in abuse and imperiousness. It additionally results in trains. And look, I don’t need America to change into China, however I do need it to have the ability to construct trains. As China can, as Europe can, as Japan can. [CLIP: The train doors are closing. Step all the way in.] The Second Avenue subway mission in New York Metropolis — [CLIP: This is the first major expansion of the New York City subway in more than 50 years.] — it was the costliest subway mission by kilometer the world has ever seen. Has New York dramatically reformed its insurance policies to make the subsequent one simpler and cheaper? [CLIP: Ladies and gentlemen, next stop, 125th Street.] [CLIP: That comes with a $6.3 billion price tag, far more than phase one.] No, in fact it hasn’t. [CLIP: Do you remember the Big Dig? What is the Big Dig? The Big Dig.] [CLIP: It’s pretty hard to ignore the Big Dig. It is everywhere.] Did the many years of delay and the billions of value overruns on Boston’s Massive Dig change how Massachusetts builds? Not likely. California. California has the worst housing downside within the nation. In 2022, the state had 12 p.c of the nation’s inhabitants. It had 30 p.c of the nation’s homeless inhabitants, and it had p.c — 5-0 — of its unsheltered homeless inhabitants. Has this unfathomable failure led to California constructing extra properties than it was constructing a decade in the past? No. It hasn’t. In the previous few many years, Democrats took a improper flip. They grew to become the celebration that believes in authorities, that defends authorities, not the celebration that forces authorities to work. That is a clumsy time to make this argument. Elon Musk and DOGE try to raze the federal authorities to the bottom. Musk has been a loud critic of California’s high-speed rail mission, calling it a fraud, saying we must always simply let him construct his imaginary Hyperloop as a substitute. However in actuality, he’s by no means provided a plan that may work to construct something higher or cheaper than high-speed rail. His different, in fact, is nothing. And I refuse to simply accept that that is our selection. A Democratic Occasion that won’t make authorities work, and a Republican Occasion that desires to make authorities fail. What these two events have created over many years is shortage. Shortage of properties, of excellent infrastructure, of unpolluted vitality, of public items. However the distinction between them is that the populist proper loves shortage. It’s powered by shortage. When there may be not sufficient to go round, we glance with suspicion on anybody who would possibly take what we now have. Look, Donald Trump may have run on extra. He may have run on bringing Texas’s housing insurance policies to the nation. In Houston, there isn’t any zoning code, so constructing is straightforward, and the common residence sells for a bit over $300,000. Examine that to Los Angeles, the place the common residence now sells for over $1 million. As a substitute, the housing disaster grew to become a cudgel they use in opposition to immigrants. [CLIP: 25 million illegal aliens competing with Americans for scarce homes is one of the most significant drivers of home prices in the country.] [CLIP: As just one example, a vivid one, look at the explosion in rent in Springfield, Ohio, where Kamala has resettled the 20,000 Haitians] Trump may have run on the success of Operation Warp Velocity had in rushing up the Covid vaccines. As a substitute, he’s slashing authorities funding for science and medical analysis, and firing scientists. He may have run on making it simpler to construct vitality of all types in America. As a substitute, he’s making an attempt to destroy the photo voltaic and wind industries. He may have run on making it simpler for Individuals to make issues and to commerce them with the world. As a substitute, he’s making an attempt to chop worldwide commerce, imposing tariffs and alienating companions. Elon Musk is wealthy due to SpaceX and Tesla — corporations which are constructed on federal subsidies. However he’s slashing what authorities can do, slightly than reimagining what it could actually do. The reply to a politics of shortage is a politics of abundance. A politics that asks what it’s that individuals really want after which organizes authorities and markets to verify there may be sufficient of it. That doesn’t provide the childishly easy divides which have so deformed our politics. Authorities just isn’t merely good always. It’s not merely unhealthy always. Typically authorities has to get out of the way in which — like in housing. Typically it has to take a central function, like in creating markets or organizing assets for applied sciences that don’t but exist and that we want and which are too dangerous for markets to fund. There’s going to be strain over these subsequent few years, as Elon Musk and Donald Trump dismantle the federal authorities to see solely the sins of the MAGA proper. And don’t get me improper, the MAGA proper is harmful. A resistance is required. However so too is another. If liberals don’t want Individuals to show to the false guarantees of strongmen, they should provide them the fruits of efficient authorities. But when Democrats are to change into the celebration of abundance, they need to confront their very own function in creating shortage. Liberals spent a era working at each stage of presidency in society to make it more durable to construct recklessly. They received used to crafting coalitions and laws that gave everybody a little bit of what they wished, even when it meant the ultimate product was astonishingly costly or many years late or maybe by no means discovered its option to completion in any respect. Then they defined away governments failures. They excuse their very own selfishness, placing out yard indicators saying “No human being is prohibited,” “Kindness is every little thing,” at the same time as they fought reasonably priced housing close by and pushed the working class out of the cities they ran. To unmake this machine will likely be painful, nevertheless it’s crucial. If liberals don’t make authorities work, zealots like Elon Musk are going to come back in and burn it down.