Senator Chris Coons, D-del. It feels like Democrats are “lost on the couch” than they lose to President Donald Trump in 2024.
CNN host Dana Bash asked Coons on Monday’s “internal politics” to see what the Democrats need to take on Trump’s focus on Trump as he has put in several policies on issues like immigration enforcement and foreign tariffs.
The Delaware senator said the main focus should be “Make the United States affordable again,” believes that Democrats lost to Trump because Americans chose not to vote.
Polls warn Democrats ‘amateur’ anti-Trump antics are ‘tank’ with Americans

Senator Chris Coons talked about Democratic strategy on Monday. (CNN screenshot)
“I think the main reason we lost has to do with the millions of people who chose not to vote,” Coons said. “We lost to the couch and won better than Donald Trump. If we focus on the issues that people care about and we don’t talk enough or fight for them, then I think we win.”
Coons also said Democrats should not let Trump distract themselves like the “bulldog” in his daily anger, warning that “no one will know where we stand and what we are fighting for.”
Trump wins vote There are about 77 million votes compared to former Vice President Kamala Harris’ 75 million votes. This is the first time that the Republican presidential candidate has won universal suffrage since George W. Bush in 2004.
Click here for more media and cultural reports
according to University of Florida Election LaboratoryIn the 2024 election, there are at least 89 million qualified voters, accounting for about 36% of the qualified vote population.

Trump won more than 77 million votes in the 2024 election. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)
Click here to get the Fox News app
The turnout rate according to the 2024 election is the second highest in the past 100 years, second only to 2020, accounting for about 64.1% of eligible voters. University of Florida Election Laboratory.
“The 2024 presidential election features high turnout, approaches the historicity of the 2020 contest and contradicts long-standing traditional political wisdom, with Republicans struggling to win contests that many voted for,” he said. The Associated Press reported November.