While Democrats won a crucial state Assembly special election on March 25, some Keystone State Democratic voters say they worry about leadership in Washington.
WEST HOMESTEAD, Pa.âAs Democratic leaders continue to grapple with how to respond to Republican President Donald Trumpâs sweeping agenda, Democratic voters in Pennsylvania interviewed by The Epoch Times say they know what they want to see from the national party: a unified front and a fresh approach.
In November, Trump led his party to a trifecta, winning the White House, Senate, and Houseâin part thanks to Pennsylvaniansâ decision to switch to his column after backing Joe Biden in 2020.
Republicansâ sweeping victory in the most recent contest has prompted soul-searching and uncertainty about Democratsâ identity moving forward. Progressive Democrats, particularly in the House, want to push the party leftward, while moderate Democrats suggest that the party in recent times has already shifted too far left and should moderate its positions, especially on social issues.
These divisions came to a head during a recent fight over government funding.
Meanwhile, polls paint a harsh picture for Democrats.
Two surveys conducted by CNN and NBC show the Democratic Party with 29 and 27 percent favorability, respectively. Speculation abounds about who will emerge to right the ship as national party leaders are under increasing pressure to wrap up rebranding efforts.
Located in Allegheny County outside Pittsburgh, the district comprises several boroughs, including Clairton, Duquesne, Homestead, Munhall, parts of West Mifflin, and others.
As is often the case among working-class Rust Belt voters, the ideological divide between Republicans and Democrats in the region is narrower than elsewhere: Residents seem to be motivated by tangible, on-the-ground issuesâespecially the economy and crimeârather than scoring political points against âthe other side.â
These voters called for a few things: unity, new leadership in the party, and a return to âcommon senseâ kitchen table issues.
âTake a Step Backâ
Laura Leone, a resident in McKeesport borough just outside of Pittsburgh, had traveled to a polling station in neighboring West Homestead to hand out flyers for Democrat Dan Goughnour ahead of the March 25 special election.
Goughnour later picked up a comfortable 63 percent majority win over GOP challenger Chuck Davis and Libertarian Adam Kitta in a contest to replace former state Rep. Matthew Gergely (D-District 35), who died in January.
The race was high-stakes for Pennsylvania, as the state assembly was evenly divided 101â101 between the GOP and the Democrats; Goughnourâs win let the Democrats secure the narrowest edge.

Marc Gergely (L), brother of the late Rep. Matthew Gergely, and Dan Goughnour on the day of the win by Goughnour, a Democrat, in Pennsylvania’s 35th Assembly District special election, in West Homestead, Pa., on March 25, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times
Leone was confident that Goughnour would be an able leader on the state level but said that on the national level, sheâs somewhat overwhelmed by the current state of politics and the âextremists on both sides.â
âI donât even know what to think,â she told The Epoch Times. âHopefully, as time passes, we can move on and we can come together and see eye to eye on certain issues that are really important.â
Leone said she previously thought of Democrats as the party of inclusion and tolerance but now feels that neither side reflects those values. She said both parties should âtake a step backâ and reexamine their approach so that America can regain a sense of unity.
A call for unity was a common refrain among Pennsylvania voters.
New Leadership
Others said they wanted new leadership to take over in the wake of Schumerâs decision to help pass the Republicansâ funding bill.
Schumer has faced intense criticism over his voteâand even calls to step asideâfrom members of his party. The Senate minority leader was no fan of the GOP funding bill but said he wanted to avert a government shutdown, arguing that such an outcome would empower the administration to make further cuts to funding and personnel.
Subsequently, Jeffries raised eyebrows when he initially refused to answer a question about whether or not Schumer should retain his leadership role. Since then, Jeffries has indicated support for Schumer, but heâs not the only one with doubts.
Rep. Ro Khanna (D-Calif.), a leading voice in the House Progressive Caucus, said during a March 24 appearance on CNN: âThe American people are fed up with the old guard, there needs to be a renewal.
âI think thereâs going to be a new generation in this country.â
Rep. Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (D-N.Y.) also decried Schumerâs vote, saying many Democrats felt âa deep sense of outrage and betrayalâ at the decision.
Dane, a 53-year-old counselor who voted in West Homestead and declined to give his last name, also says new leadership might bring better results.
Though Dane resists the Trump administration and says âit needs to be stopped as much as it can be,â he said he is also dissatisfied with the current state of the Democratic Party.
âI think we need some new blood … more in the lines of an AOC kind of person, I think maybe a bit more moderated than she is,â he told The Epoch Times, referring to Ocasio-Cortez.
He said that he liked some of Ocasio-Cortezâs ideas but was unsure whether her progressive left policy platform could have broad enough appeal.
Like Ms. Leone, he wants to see leadership from both sides of the aisle embrace compromise and partnership with the opposing party to âget things done.â
âCommon Senseâ Approach
For many voters, Democratsâ best way forward would be a return to classic kitchen table issues, with less focus on controversial social positions.
George Harchar, a retired veteran and welder, told The Epoch Times that he tends to vote for Democrats at the local level, citing their social safety net approach and the slate of services they offer to senior citizens.
Like many Republicans, he backed Josh Shapiro for governor in 2022, a contest Shapiro won by around 15 percent partly due to his unique appeal to the stateâs working-class voters.
But at the national level, Harchar said, he often votes Republican and worries that national Democrats have lost their way.
âTheyâre all messed up right now … they support things that I just canât support. I have daughters, I have granddaughtersâI canât support men playing in womenâs sports,â Harchar said.
So far, he says, heâs broadly happy with what the Trump administration has been doing but has reservations about its methods.
âI like what theyâre trying to do but I donât always agree with exactly the way theyâre doing it,â he said.
Harchar says he hasnât completely written the Democrats offâhe voted for Goughnourâbut would like to see its more âradicalâ wing toned down. He said that if the Democrats took a âcommonsenseâ approach, they would find that most Americans would incline toward the party.
Others say they simply want solutions to the problems they see in their lives and communities.

Scott Stevens after an interview with The Epoch Times in West Homestead, Pa., on March 25, 2025. Madalina Vasiliu/The Epoch Times
Scott Stevens, a retired Army vet and law enforcement officer, gestured at a street of somewhat rundown buildings that ran parallel to the fire station that doubled as a polling place in the special election. He noted that when he was a child, the street was thriving and lined with successful businesses.
As he spoke to The Epoch Times, the conversation was repeatedly interrupted by the crashing sound of old drywall being tossed into a dumpster from a third-floor window of a building across the street.
âNow, you see big businesses taking over, Walmart stuff. … Thereâs no American dream left,â he said.
Original News Source Link – Epoch Times
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