Jumping ahead to 2028 …
Surprised they admitted that Mike Pence had been a speaker.
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Jumping ahead to 2028 …
2028:
He’s my guy. But I’m flexible.
Expand the map!
Independent Dan Osborn makes another run at Nebraska Senate
Independent populist Dan Osborn, whose insurgent Senate campaign seriously threatened one of Nebraska’s Republicans from securing a third term last year, is now taking on GOP Sen. Pete Ricketts — one of the wealthiest members of Congress.
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Osborn, who has already met with state Democrats, announced his candidacy against the former Nebraska governor Tuesday via campaign video.
A Navy veteran and mechanic by trade, Osborn is aware he won’t be able to duplicate the out-of-nowhere grassroots campaign he deployed last cycle, when he outperformed Vice President Kamala Harris significantly in the state.
“There is no element of surprise [this time],” Osborn told POLITICO, adding that he expects Ricketts and his allies to “come out with a lot of money and go very negative right from the beginning.”
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National polling hints at a growing discontent among independents, Democrats and some Republicans over Trump’s policies, including the passage of his megabill last week that critics predict will add trillions to the national deficit and boot millions off Medicaid.
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As POLITICO reported in November, Chuck Schumer touted the race in a virtual rallydays before the election. The Senate Democratic campaign arm and its main allied super PAC also made late donationsto Osborn or groups supporting him. Democrats didn’t recruit a candidate into the race last year and aren’t planning to do so next year either, giving Osborn a chance to carry Democrats and the state’s many independent voters, according to Nebraska Democratic Party chair Jane Kleeb.
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Kleeb said for Osborn to win, he’ll have to make up ground in Nebraska’s 3rd Congressional District, which broke heavily for Fischer last cycle. She said it’s possible.
“We just think that there is so much anger at what is happening with all of the cuts, in particular in rural communities, that if there was ever an opening to win statewide, [2026] is the year.”
But Osborn vows to remain independent, saying: “I have no problem sitting at lunch by myself.”
Jumping ahead to 2028 …
I think Governor Janet Mills is considering a run. Many believe she may be favored against the incumbent senator; hence, the latest Collins' dithering.I have no idea if she'll run or not, but I do think if she does she'll face a much tougher race next year than she has in the past. Maine overall is a blue state and her polling in the state is at or near an all-time low I believe. Has any prominent state Democrat announced plans to run against her?
It was more like 7.5% ahead of Kamala. And he still lost by a lot. It wasn't a close race.Exactly. Osborn shows how we do that, not by running a standard-issue Democrat in a state where the brand is toxic, but by backing someone rooted in the place who can speak to people’s lived experience.
He’s a Navy vet and union mechanic going up against a billionaire ex-governor. That’s the contrast. Voters responded in 2024; he outperformed Kamala by around 10 points last time. Now the party’s wisely staying out of the way again. No blue branding, no Beltway consultants. Just a working-class candidate with real local credibility.
If this is what it takes to win again in states like Nebraska, then Democrats should be looking at ND, SD, MT, and UT next. Places where national Dems can’t win, but the ideas still resonate if they come from someone who fits the culture. Give them air cover, money, organizing help, but let them run on their own terms.
Let me rephrase: Young Tester was the Osborn of Montana. Or, to put it differently, Osborn's career in the Senate, should he win, would be a lot like Tester's.Tester is not the Osborn of Montana. Tester was a long-time incumbent, ran as a Democrat, and had full party backing in a state with actual Democratic infrastructure. He lost in 2024, despite his local appeal, because the toxicity of the national Democratic brand overwhelmed it. Osborn ran as an independent in a deep-red state where Democrats didn’t even field a candidate. These aren’t remotely comparable.
If anything, Osborn is testing a model for post-party coalition-building in places where Democrats can’t win under their own name. He outperformed Kamala in Nebraska. Mamdani just beat a donor-backed juggernaut in NYC through organizing, not party muscle. These aren’t isolated flukes, they’re signs that nationalization can be disrupted when message and ground game align.
If you want to understand Osborn’s value, stop lumping him in with past candidates propped up by party machines, like Jaime Harrison. Look at what he’s actually doing: building an anti-MAGA coalition where Democrats have no path on their own. That’s what expanding the map might actually look like.
Other than maybe Utah, I'm not sure those are the right states to target for an approach like in Nebraska (or really target at all for Dems, at least right now). Osborn did well in Nebraska largely by racking up votes in the major urban areas - he won by about 73k votes in the three most populous counties (Douglas, Lancaster, Sarpy) and lost by about 140k everywhere else. Nebraska, despite its reputation, has a fairly small rural population (only around 27% of the population - lower, for example, than NC, SC, and Wisconsin, among others), so a good moderate candidate like Osborn has a chance to compete by racking up votes in the urban areas and hoping to hang. States like ND, SD, and MT, by contrast, are much more heavily rural, and their urban areas are considerably more conservative than the major urban areas in Nebraska. I'm not saying Dems/independents should give up on ever competing in senate races in those states, but they're probably among the 5-10 most difficult states for a left-of-center (or even center-of-center) candidate to ever win. An independent candidate in those states probably has more chance than a Dem candidate, but I just can't see the investment of resources being a smart decision right now.Exactly. Osborn shows how we do that, not by running a standard-issue Democrat in a state where the brand is toxic, but by backing someone rooted in the place who can speak to people’s lived experience.
He’s a Navy vet and union mechanic going up against a billionaire ex-governor. That’s the contrast. Voters responded in 2024; he outperformed Kamala by around 10 points last time. Now the party’s wisely staying out of the way again. No blue branding, no Beltway consultants. Just a working-class candidate with real local credibility.
If this is what it takes to win again in states like Nebraska, then Democrats should be looking at ND, SD, MT, and UT next. Places where national Dems can’t win, but the ideas still resonate if they come from someone who fits the culture. Give them air cover, money, organizing help, but let them run on their own terms.
I guess being the child of ultra-wealthy, cosmopolitan South Asian with Marxists leaning would not help his admission chances quite as much as - other
Tester campaigned more or less like an independent, often running away from the Dems as much as running with him. Same as Manchin in WV. The Dems brand was better in 2006 than 2024.Saying Osborn is like “young Tester” still misses what’s new here. Osborn is trying to do what the Democratic Party can’t do in Nebraska: build a working-class anti-MAGA coalition without the burden of the national brand. That’s not just candidate flavor, that’s a different structure entirely.
Yeah I agree with you on things like "labor-focused" and "local credibility" and "materialist message," and I don't doubt that not being tied to the Dem brand helped Osborn. But my concern is that things that should (at least in my opinion) be a big piece of the national Dem platform/strategy - green energy, Medicare for All, social safety net, etc - are simply never going to play well in states like Montana and the Dakotas, which have more rural and independent (I don't mean politically independent, I mean personally independent) populations, and fewer urban working-class enclaves. Tester, for example, only won/competed in Montana by breaking sharply with Dems on some key policy initiatives - including immigration, the Green New Deal, Keystone Pipeline, etc. So if the ultimate goal is not just to win power but also use that power to enact major reform, I just don't think talking about Montana and the Dakotas is really what we should be doing.Appreciate the thoughtful pushback, but I think you’re misreading the scope of my argument. I’m not saying ND, SD, MT, or UT are the next Osborn states on the board. I’m saying Osborn is showing us how to compete at all in places where the Democratic label is a liability. That kind of post-party coalition-building may not be viable everywhere right now, but we’d be foolish not to start exploring it in states where the current strategy has completely bottomed out.
I wasn’t claiming Osborn’s strategy could be carbon-copied in the Dakotas or Montana and deliver instant wins. I was pointing to a broader structural insight: in states where the Democratic brand is a net negative, a labor-rooted, culturally-aligned, post-party strategy like Osborn’s may offer a way back into contention. That same insight applies, arguably even more so, to Kansas, Missouri, Indiana, and Iowa, given their larger urban centers and their histories of electing populist Democrats.
I’m less interested in copying Osborn’s geographic strategy than in understanding his structural strategy: local credibility, labor ties, independence from national party baggage, and a materialist message that resonates with disaffected voters. That model has real potential far beyond Nebraska, especially if we’re serious about building power outside the usual consultant-mapped terrain.