The Democratic National Committee (DNC) on Saturday elected Minnesota party leader Ken Martin, who once called for President Donald Trump to be tried for treason, as its next national chair in the wake of the party’s disastrous performance in the November elections.
The election of Martin is the party’s first formal step to try and rebound from the November elections, in which President Donald Trump recaptured the White House, and Republicans flipped the Senate, held on to their fragile majority in the House and made major gains with working-class, minority and younger voters.
‘We have one team, one team, the Democratic Party,’ Martin said following his victory. ‘The fight is for our values. The fight is for working people. The fight right now is against Donald Trump and the billionaires who bought this country.’
Martin, over the past eight years, has served as a DNC vice chair and has led the association of state Democratic Party chairs.
In 2020, Martin called Trump a ‘traitor’ who should be tried for treason.
‘[Donald Trump] should be immediately impeached and then put on trial for treason,’ Martin wrote on June 29, 2020, citing an anonymously sourced news story. ‘His actions led to the deaths of American soldiers. He is a traitor to our nation and all those who have served.’
He topped Wisconsin Democratic Party chair Ben Wikler by over 100 votes among the 428 DNC members who cast ballots as they gathered for the party’s annual winter meeting, which this year was held at National Harbor in Maryland, just outside of Washington, D.C.
Martin O’Malley, the former two-term Maryland governor and 2016 Democratic presidential candidate who served as commissioner of the Social Security Administration during former President Biden’s last year in office, was a distant third in the voting.
Among the longshot candidates were Faiz Shakir, who ran the 2020 Democratic presidential campaign of Sen. Bernie Sanders of Vermont, and Marianne Williamson, who ran unsuccessfully for the 2020 and 2024 Democratic presidential nominations. Williamson endorsed Martin on Saturday, ahead of the vote.
The eight candidates in the race were vying to succeed DNC Chair Jaime Harrison, who decided against seeking a second straight four-year term steering the national party committee.
With no clear leader in the party, the next DNC chair could become the de facto face of Democrats from coast to coast and will make major decisions on messaging, strategy, infrastructure and where to spend millions in political contributions.
‘It’s an important opportunity for us to not only refocus the party and what we present to voters, but also an opportunity for us to look at how we internally govern ourselves,’ longtime New Hampshire Democratic Party Chair Ray Buckley told Fox News Digital.
Buckley, a former DNC vice chair who backed Martin, said he’s ‘very excited about the potential of great reform within the party.’ He emphasized that he hoped for ‘significantly more support for the state parties. That’s going to be a critical step towards our return to majority status.’
In his victory speech, Martin stressed unity and that the party needed ‘to rebuild our coalition.’
‘We need to go on offense,’ Martin said. ‘We’re going to go out there and take this fight to Donald Trump and the Republicans.’