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Socialism

Democratic Socialism Remains an Elite Phenomenon

Darializa Avila Chevalier is supported by wealthy, well-educated elites.

Robby Soave | 6.25.2026 2:30 PM

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Darializa Avila Chevalier | Adani Samat/Anthony Behar/Sipa USA/Newscom
Darializa Avila Chevalier (Adani Samat/Anthony Behar/Sipa USA/Newscom)

Are the Democratic Socialists of America (DSA) surging to victory in New York City because foreigners and immigrants are smuggling this ideology into the U.S.? That seems to be the takeaway for many conservatives bemoaning that "Third World-ism"—i.e., the nominally communist brand of authoritarianism that is prevalent in some African and Latin American countries—is winning at the ballot box. Their solution, unsurprisingly, is to curb all categories of immigration, legal and illegal.

You are reading Free Media from Robby Soave and Reason. Get more of Robby's on-the-media, disinformation, and free speech coverage.

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The victories of Claire Valdez and Darializa Avila Chevalier in Tuesday's Democratic House primaries are indeed lamentable. Avila Chevalier is a modern campus radical who has aligned herself with far-left activist groups that wish to "eradicate Western civilization." She wants to abolish borders, police, private property, etc. Valdez is no less extreme.

But do they represent the triumph of Third World migration to the U.S.? Matt Walsh, who is typical of conservatives on this, thinks so. He writes: "Third world communists are the enemy. They've taken over our greatest American city. They're taking over one of our two major political parties. They hate this country. They hate white people. They hate our heritage and traditions. This is the fight. Get in the game or go away."

Reality is much more complicated. As Batya Ungar-Sargon notes, Chevalier's base of support is not specifically immigrants or even minorities—it's the affluent.

"Chevalier, who won a district that includes the Bronx, actually lost the Bronx part of the district by 30 points," writes Ungar-Sargon. "She also lost predominantly Black and Hispanic areas, and she lost lower-income areas by 10 points. She won with young voters and higher income voters, and won majority college educated areas by 20 points."

The comparison with the Bronx is instructive. The South Bronx is represented by Democrat Ritchie Torres, who is not a democratic socialist and staunchly supports Israel; he easily won re-election in a district that is disproportionately black and low income. Chevalier did slightly better with black people than her opponent did, but she got crushed when it came to the Hispanic vote.

The point is that this view of socialism as a specifically Third World ideology conquering the U.S. because of mass migration isn't true. Affluent, native-born white and black people are just as likely, or by some measures, more likely to support left-wing politics than many categories of immigrants, particularly Hispanic immigrants. If right-wing immigration hardliners had their way and restricted citizenship to just people who can trace their lineage back to colonial times, we would be no safer from socialism. In fact, the category most likely to support socialist policies is the highly educated.

The democratic socialists like to stress that their movement is populist and working class, though their adherents are disproportionately rich and credentialed. It remains to be seen whether this kind of politics can be successful outside of select enclaves in New York City; for now, the DSA remains an elite phenomenon.


This Week on Free Media

I'm joined by Amber Duke to discuss Europeans loving America during their World Cup trips, Joy Reid's lack of patriotism, and more.

You can also catch a special Jason Russell episode of Freed Up. (Christian Britschgi will be back next week.)


Worth Watching

I know I've talked about it a bunch already, but I just cannot get Backrooms out of my brain. I think I might go to the theater and see it a second time, which is something I almost never do.

In case you somehow missed this discussion, Backrooms is a debut horror film from Kane Parsons about a man who discovers a labyrinth of secret rooms and hallways that go on forever, becoming weirder and weirder the deeper he goes. Much of the movie is in a "found footage" shaky camera style (which I like), and the concept comes from a YouTube series that Parsons made as a teenager (he's only 20 years old now). The idea is based on old internet posts about abandoned shopping malls and storage facilities—overlooked, "liminal" spaces.

What's so brilliant about the film is that the dialogue is very sparse, leaving the viewer to fill in the gaps and impart meaning to what we're witnessing. I read the film as a cautionary tale about AI's shortcomings; the backrooms, and the monsters that inhabit them, are cheap imitations of reality. The Wall Street Journal's Jack Butler saw it as a lamentation for the lost pre-smartphone era of our youth, when it was more common for teenagers to go out and explore the world.

When I saw the film, I thought of Crystal City, a neighborhood of Arlington, Virginia, with a sprawling underground mall. I lived there in 2010, during my internship at Reason. Since I had three roommates and little privacy back in those immediate post-college days, I would often explore the mall at night—it connected to the metro, so it was open all hours—and make phone calls. At the time, there was a monster down there, too: If you took a wrong turn, you would accidentally run into an incredibly freaky life-sized Ronald McDonald statue. That McDonald's, which was entirely underground and did not connect to the outside at all, closed in 2013.

What I'm saying is, I have been to the backrooms.

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NEXT: Lawsuit Argues Hawaii's Harsh New Hemp Regulations Will Stifle Competition

Robby Soave is a senior editor at Reason.

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  1. Rick James   2 hours ago

    Repositing this here, since Reason is essentially reposting "whycome all my politicians socialists?"

    ===

    Dear Reason:

    Over the last 11 years are so, there has been an increasing number of social commentators, politicians, pundits, journalists and a tiny subset of your blog commentariat who have been deeply concerned with a concept that's colloquially referred to as "wokeness". During that ~11 year period, you have responded to many in this segment with derision, mockery, eye-rolling, strategic and reluctant support of candidates who were either expressly "woke" or "woke adjacent" or were what could be described as being weak of constitution and therefore were known to be manipulated or controlled by forces of "wokeness".

    One of the reasons a small few of us began to ring the alarm bells on this disposition we call "woke" (which was not only growing in power but growing in national and international influence) is that 'wokeness' is not just UN-libertarian, it was explicitly anti-libertarian in that it is overtly racist, sexist, misogynist, believes in sex-essentialism, race essentialism, anti-capitalist, anti-free market, anti-science, anti-reason/rationalism, anti-individualism, subscribes to cooky 'flat-earth' theories like "a man becomes a woman by merely declaring himself to be so", that the earth is going to end in 12 years if we don't eliminate oil from the American individual, family and industrial diet-- completely with no exceptions. I could go on.

    However, we were also well aware that this so-called 'wokeness' came with it attached a whole slate of other ideological (both economic and social) policy prescriptions that required all the prescience of someone who just bothered to listen to what the "woke" said, loudly and repeatedly, over this 11 year period.

    Some of those ideologies and prescriptions include but are not limited to the following:

    o Massive wealth transfers from the productive to the non-productive to achieve 'equity'.
    o Rent control.
    o Seizing private property and nationalizing it as a means of achieving the previous two.
    o Seizing the means of production of large segments of the industrial sector such as transportation, natural resources, food production and retail.
    o Housing reform with so-called 'libertarian' or 'libertarian adjacent' concepts such as 'upzoning' and high density requirements as part of way of eliminating single family housing which is a relic of the "nuclear family".
    o Destroying the nuclear family.
    o The total elimination of Capitalism and/or free markets.
    o Outright Marxism.
    o Massive Transfer payments based on racial identity.
    o The elimination of the social construct known as The United States which includes the Bill of Rights and the constitution.
    o Wealth confiscation from each according to [his] ability, to those according to [his] need
    o National Health Care
    o Free university education for all.
    o The elimination of private property.

    If you were not able to see the connection between the rise of "wokeness", the broad election of "socialists" across the American urban landscape and in particular, your own back yard, you are at this point either guilty of willful ignorance or are too incompetent to continue to comment on these matters.

    Signed:

    The commenter formerly known as Diane Reynolds.

    PS: [Suderman's article this morning] I have concluded that she is, in technical terms, cuckoo bananas.

    Thank you for reading the comments. You should take heed of them more often.

    Log in to Reply
    1. damikesc   1 hour ago

      You're Diane Reynolds? Terrific. Wondered what happened to her. Quite fond of her.

      Log in to Reply
    2. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

      Everytime these things are mentioned, Reeeeason churns out a don't fight the KuLtUrE wAr screed.

      Log in to Reply
    3. Juliana Frink   28 minutes ago

      Bravo!

      Log in to Reply
  2. mad.casual   1 hour ago

    Darializa Avila Chevalier is supported by wealthy, well-educated highly-credentialed elites.

    FIFY.

    Log in to Reply
  3. IceTrey   1 hour ago

    "When you see that trading is done, not by consent, but by compulsion–when you see that in order to produce, you need to obtain permission from men who produce nothing–when you see that money is flowing to those who deal, not in goods, but in favors–when you see that men get richer by graft and by pull than by work, and your laws don’t protect you against them, but protect them against you–when you see corruption being rewarded and honesty becoming a self-sacrifice–you may know that your society is doomed." - Ayn Rand

    Log in to Reply
  4. Don't look at me! ( Is the war over yet?)   1 hour ago

    In fact, the category most likely to support socialist policies is the highly educated indoctrinated.

    Log in to Reply
  5. Spiritus Mundi   1 hour ago

    Darializa Avila Chevalier is supported by wealthy, well-educated elites.

    There is no better system than socialism to enure these dim bulbs remain ensconced in society's upper crust.

    Log in to Reply
  6. Juliana Frink   29 minutes ago

    Proof once again that:

    Socialism is the ELITES' Paradise!

    Log in to Reply
  7. Eeyore   6 minutes ago

    Midwits.

    Thank goodness I'm one of the dumb ones - too stupid to delude myself that I'm one of the elite.

    Log in to Reply
  8. Agammamon   3 minutes ago

    Its amazing how successfully the Party of Slavery has gotten people to believe it 'represents the working class' when its really a club to manage the proles for the benefit of the elite.

    Log in to Reply
    1. Agammamon   3 minutes ago

      But we will, of course, strategically - but reluctantly - continue to vote for them.

      Log in to Reply

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