Members of the Democratic National Committee (DNC) have reportedly been seeking to unseat Ken Martin as chairman, believing he did not help the party recover from the 2024 elections.
a report of The bastion spoke with at least three anonymous sources within the DNC who confirmed that the party has become increasingly frustrated with Martin’s leadership, especially after his appearance in I could save America where he defended himself “against accusations that he had gone back on his promise to publish a subsequent report on what went wrong in the 2024 elections, as well as accusations that the “The DNC has had trouble raising money and balancing its budget.”
“Concerns have become so pronounced in recent weeks that some members of the Democratic National Committee have privately discussed trying to force Martin out of the job, according to three people familiar with these conversations,” the report says. “The idea was put on hold after members failed to identify an alternative candidate willing to take over.”
Frustration over Martin’s leadership has only worsened in recent months, with some members considering resolutions that could force him to balance the Democratic National Committee’s budget.
“I think it would be a very hard job, no matter who has it. But [Martin] He seems especially ill-suited for it,” said Democratic strategist Jesse Lehrich. The bastion. “He Save pod The interview was amazing for me.”
Under Martin’s leadership, the Democratic National Committee has spent more money than it has raised, while the Republican National Committee maintains a “roughly seven-to-one monetary advantage,” and Martin borrowed $15 million last October for elections in Virginia and New Jersey. Insiders say he could take out a similar loan this summer or lay off staff.
“The biggest knock against him is that he seems absolutely incapable of managing a budget,” said one anonymous source. “To put the Democratic National Committee in such a bad financial situation by going into what… is probably the wildest [presidential] primaries that we have had for a long time: a series of irresponsibility and immaturity.”
“It just seems like we’re being gaslit right now,” the source added.
Michael Kapp, a California-based Democratic National Committee member, defended Martin’s tenure, saying he has been “moving the party away from a consultant-centered model toward one more focused on state parties and organizers, and that was always going to create friction.”
“The loudest people in DC, including the I could save America friends, are often the ones furthest from the doors that knock. What I’m hearing from state parties, organizers and activists on the ground is overwhelmingly positive,” Kapp added. “Since [Martin’s] As chairman of the Democratic National Committee, we won 30 of 30 legislative changes in the State House. The strategy is working.”
